RFK cited a study, claiming that vaccines didn't nothing. The Senator, a Republican and a doctor, went and found the study, read at least part of it, enough of it to find it means the opposite of what RFK is saying.
In his first Senate confirmation hearing to be secretary of the Department of Health and Human Services, Robert F. Kennedy Jr. repeated claims we have written about before on vaccines and chronic disease.
www.factcheck.org
"Kennedy Repeats False and Misleading Claims in Confirmation Hearing"
He also did the same thing in his confirmation hearing.
U.S. Health and Human Services Secretary latest commissioned report has garnered backlash for inaccuracies from those in the science field as RFK Jr. tries to band doctors from publishing in medical journals
www.irishstar.com
He also had a report made that has loads of errors.
"Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. said that the report from his “Make America Healthy Again" (MAHA) Commission is based on “gold-standard” science, referencing over 500 studies and other sources to support its findings. However, many of these citations contain numerous errors, including
broken links and misrepresented conclusions."
He claims he "wanted to “make sure that Americans have good information." But is literally spreading false information. He turns up in front of Senators and cites the source and the source says the opposite of what he's saying.