Excerpted from a commentary in Science magazine, by its editor-in-chief H. Holden Thorp:
"Last weekend, Twitter and later the mainstream media exploded with a controversy surrounding an invitation to prominent vaccine scientist Peter Hotez to debate anti-vax charlatan and spoiler presidential candidate Robert F. Kennedy Jr on the podcast, The Joe Rogan Experience. There was an immediate rally around Hotez by scientists and celebrities on Twitter and lots of discussion about why this invitation is a classic anti-science setup.
Hucksters like RFK Jr are skilled at flooding the zone with garbage. Kennedy recently told Rogan that Wi-Fi could open the blood-brain barrier and cause cancer. Absurd statements like this are a trap for scientists. A scientist wants to explain how conservation of energy works and why Kennedy’s assertion violates just about every principle there is in chemistry and physics. This approach sets up two huge problems. First, it gives RFK’s garbage equal footing with principles that have been established by centuries of science. The second is that to a lay listener, the scientist just comes off as fitting the stereotype of a nitpicking nerd and RFK looks like a powerful communicator. Hotez debating RFK about vaccines would produce the same result." (our emphasis)
Now that he's an announced candidate for President (but in the wrong party), RFK Jr. has even more opportunities to spread his dangerous garbage, not only regarding vaccines and health care, but his nonsensical defense of Russia's invasion of Ukraine and belief that the U.S. is the cause of most of the world's problems. The sooner the general public -- and especially Dem primary voters -- are made aware of his fringe ideas, the better for the country.
(photo: Getty Images)