RFK Jr. Is Now Launching a Podcast
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RFK Jr. Is Now Launching a Podcast

Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. is set to launch his podcast next week. It will feature him in conversations with doctors, scientists, and agency staff on key health matters. The podcast’s goal is to engage directly with the public, covering topics such as chronic disease, nutrition improvement, food quality, and healthcare costs. Last week, RFK Jr. fulfilled his promise to unban several peptides following official approval from the Food and Drug Administration.

RFK Jr. announces a new podcast

Robert F. Kennedy Jr. announced that he’s set to release his podcast called “The Secretary Kennedy Podcast” next week. According to the teaser reviewed by Associated Press, he claimed that the podcast will bring “a new era of radical transparency in government.”

The teaser video showcased the HHS-branded studio as an ominous voice played in the background. In it, Kennedy Jr. claims that the podcast will expose corruption and lies that have harmed Americans. He said that the podcast will reveal the names of those who have been blocking progress to attain a better public health.

An HHS spokesperson released a statement to Newsweek to confirm the podcast launch and reveal what the audience can expect from it. The statement read, “The Secretary Kennedy Podcast will provide a direct platform to engage with the public on the health issues that matter most to American families, from chronic disease and nutrition to food quality and health care costs, while bringing radical transparency to the conversations shaping those issues.”

In a video posted on X, the politician promised that he’ll have conversations with prominent doctors, scientists, and leaders in the medical field, asking them important questions to “lift the taboos and expose the hypocrisy and the conflicts and the corruption.”

This podcast news comes a week after a report revealed that the FDA could lift the ban on several peptides, making them accessible to the general public so they don’t have to buy them from the black market.

Originally reported by Shazmeen Navrange on Mandatory.

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