Discussion about this post

User's avatar
Dick Russell's avatar

I wish I could respond to each and every one of you, but what I can say is how much I appreciate the many insights you've shared - AND it looks like the tremendous amount of support that RFK Jr. continues to generate has paid off today with the committee sending his nomination on to the full Senate. Let's keep up the good fight for our children and grandchildren's future!

Expand full comment
Teddy Macker's avatar

Thank you, Dick. I appreciate your ability to distill lots of information and cut through the noise.

Perhaps James Hillman might've said Kennedy's apostasy is not merely political but actually religious, too.

Our new religion seems to be scientism -- the needy, blind, excessively credulous embrace of anything supposedly scientific (evident in our collective resistance to any skepticism of our current vaccine program, evident in the concerning, now-common phrase "I believe in science," and evident in the Anthony Fauci votive candles, revelatory artifacts of our time) -- and Kennedy is an apostate, a heretic, because he asks questions and he doubts and deconstructs the prevailing religious order. His actions are arguably tantamount to someone telling a devout Christian "God is not real" and then telling that Christian s/he may no longer be able to participate in a particular sacrament.

The bitter irony is that asking questions/doubting and deconstructing the prevailing order *is* actually the scientific way. In other words, one could argue the prevailing scientistic status quo is in fact what's heretical. And that Kennedy -- by making room for what Richard Horton, editor-in-chief of the medical journal "The Lancet," calls “the traditional norms of disinterested inquiry and free expression of opinion" -- is the devout one. (“Asking questions has become forbidden in some circles,” Dr. Makary, the new commissioner of the Food and Drug Commission says. “But asking questions is not the problem, it’s the answer.”)

In sum, the vilification of Kennedy, I'd humbly argue, is so curiously extreme not simply because he threatens powerful industries and the powerful political parties in bed with those industries -- he threatens people's faith and their identity, too.

Expand full comment
17 more comments...

No posts