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Part of me wants to be snarky about this. Because I knew it was going to happen. It felt obvious to me. But I can’t entirely blame individuals for believing well-funded, widely-disseminated, professionally-crafted bullshit. So I’m going to say this with the most grace and sympathy toward my Robert F. Kennedy Jr.-admiring readers as I possibly can: There is nothing Kennedy can do at the Department of Health that will make up for what Donald Trump is doing at the Environmental Protection Agency. Nothing. If fully realized, the Trump administration’s recent actions at the EPA will result in skyrocketing rates of chronic disease and cancer in America—particularly in babies and pregnant people, populations particularly vulnerable to fossil fuel pollution. This is not only my opinion, but that of several major medical groups, including the American Lung Association and the American Public Health Association. Here’s a short summary of what EPA Administrator Lee Zeldin did just last week, via the New York Times—and it’s really just the tip of the iceberg:
In addition, Zeldin said the mission of the EPA would fundamentally change. No longer would the agency’s purpose be “to protect human health and the environment,” as its been since Richard Nixon established the EPA in 1970. Instead, Zeldin said the EPA’s purpose would be to “lower the cost of buying a car, heating a home, and running a business.” There are far more egregious, specific actions Trump’s EPA has taken to harm public health in the last few weeks that I’ll list toward the bottom of this letter, if you need more evidence that “Make America Healthy Again” was a bald-faced lie. But here’s the bottom line, via Phil Landrigan, a pediatrician and director of Boston College’s global public health program: “For an administration that portrays itself as pro-life, a group within the population that will suffer most seriously from those impacts are pregnant women, their infants in the womb, and young kids,” he told The New Lede. “Something that is portrayed as freeing up industry actually ends up killing kids.” Kennedy can remove all the fluoride from all the drinking water systems in America. It’s not going to make up for dismantling Mercury Air Toxics Standards, which are “critical to protect babies from harmful mercury from coal-fired power plants,” according to the American Lung Association. Kennedy can rescind every approval of every food dye currently backed by the FDA. It’s not going to make up for undoing regulations on car and truck pollution, which will lead to “significantly more toxic air pollution from vehicle exhaust, exacerbating the risks of asthma, lung disease, and heart attacks,” according to the Alliance of Nurses for Healthy Environments. Last week, Trump’s EPA released a list of people and organizations praising the agency’s recent actions—which include several proposals to deregulate the chemical industry. Not one environmental or public health group appeared on the list. There were, however, 10 fossil fuel industry trade groups; several conservative policy groups with fossil fuel industry backing; and 23 members of Congress who have cumulatively taken over $11 million in campaign donations from the oil and gas sector over their career lifetimes. (Fun fact: these 23 members have a cumulative lifetime pro-environment voting score of 4 out of 100). Coincidentally, all those groups and all these members of Congress routinely downplay the massive human health risk that climate change poses, particularly to children. Because that’s what people who derive money and power from fossil fuels do: They deny, they downplay, and they deflect. This reality is like 400mg of magnesium: A tough pill that the wellness community needs to swallow. “Make America Healthy Again” is dead, and Big Oil killed it. Worse, they were part of the political coalition that gave the fossil fuel industry carte blanche power to dismantle public health and environmental protections across America. So now they have a responsibility to pivot and raise hell. Here are some more specifics about what Trump has done at the EPA over the last week or so:
Importantly, many of these regulatory actions are still in the proposal stage, and will be subject to legal challenges. Spreading the messageI went on two shows to talk about the failures of the “Make America Healthy Again” movement this week, to try and reach some new audiences that may not be in this newsletter’s bubble. The second was The Hill TV, which has a fairly right-wing audience, as you can see from the comments on my interview on YouTube where I’m getting absolutely read to filth. But I was invited by Marianne Williamson, who has a strong foothold in the wellness community, so I figured it was a good opportunity to reach some people who might be receptive.
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