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RFK Jr. tells Joe Rogan he’s ‘aware’ CIA could assassinate him like uncle JFK, claims vaccine-autism link

Joe Rogan and Robert F. Kennedy Jr talk about JFK's assassination
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Democratic presidential candidate Robert F. Kennedy Jr. has appeared on controversial podcaster Joe Rogan’s show, where he has doubled down on his conspiracy theory about his uncle JFK’s assassination and his anti-vaccine stance.

Kennedy appeared on the show Thursday, with Rogan acknowledging that “people are very concerned with letting you say things that are going to get them in trouble” because he was a “kind of looney” regarding vaccines.

Kennedy went into detail about how he, as an environmental lawyer, was approached by a woman with an autistic son who changed his outlook on vaccination.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention says there is no link between vaccines and autism.

He also peddled a conspiracy theory that the CIA was involved in the assassination of his uncle, President John F. Kennedy.

“What do you think happens when you get into office? Like, if you’re talking about your uncle who was assassinated and you believe the intelligence agencies were a part of that, what happens to you?” Rogan probed.

“Well, I got to be careful,” Kennedy responded. “And I’m aware of that — I’m aware of that danger. I don’t live in fear of it, you know, at all. But I’m not stupid about it, and I take precautions.”

The US government concluded that convicted shooter Lee Harvey Oswald acted alone in the 1963 murder of JFK.

It also determined there was no credible evidence that he was part of a conspiracy to assassinate the president.

The pair also discussed Kennedy’s book on US chief medical adviser Anthony Fauci, called “The Real Anthony Fauci.”

In the 2021 book, the presidential hopeful accused Fauci of assisting in “a historic coup d’etat against western democracy” and promoted unproven COVID treatments such as ivermectin, which is meant to treat parasites, and the anti-malaria drug hydroxychloroquine.

Rogan gushed about the book: “If what you were saying was not true, you would have been instantly sued … it was so disturbing that sometimes I had to go and read fiction at times.”

According to the Hollywood Reporter, “The Joe Rogan Experience” averages 11 million listeners per episode.

Who is RFK Jr?

For starters, he hails from a political dynasty.

Kennedy is the nephew of President Kennedy and the son of Sen. Robert F. Kennedy, a Democratic presidential candidate gunned down on the campaign trail in 1968.

The self-proclaimed “truth-teller” is an environmental lawyer and author of two best-selling books.

Robert F. Kennedy Jr. went on Joe Rogan’s podcast where they discussed many controversial topics.
Robert F. Kennedy Jr. went on Joe Rogan’s podcast, where they discussed many controversial topics. Youtube/@PowerfulJRE

He is also known to have a troubling relationship with women, according to a recent book by Jerry Oppenheimer, titled “Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. and the Dark Side of the Dream.”

The book claims he was a serial cheater who proposed to his second wife, Mary Richardson, while still married to his first wife, Emily Black, and later allegedly encouraged Mary to commit suicide.

“Any woman who gets involved with Bobby does so with her eyes open, or their brains lopped off,” a longtime friend of the successful environmental lawyer warns in the book.

Kennedy has six children.

He married “Curb Your Enthusiasm” actress Cheryl Hines in 2014.

RFK Jr. is best known for his controversial views on vaccines and the liberal attitude toward gun reform, which clash with many of the viewpoints within his own political party.

“Even the slightest press scrutiny is his biggest problem,” one President Biden insider said to Politico about RFK Jr: “When Democrats see a candidate is anti-vaccination, anti-assault weapons ban, and a quasi-2020 election denier, their first thought is that this person must be a MAGA Republican.”

But that’s not the only thing about him.

Time magazine once named him “Hero for the Planet,” and he spent much of his speech when he launched his presidential bid talking about his environmental evangelism against big polluters.

His campaign centers on his claim that the government and big business are working together to benefit the rich and oppress working people.

He is also resolutely anti-war and believes the “mistakes” in Europe that led to war between Russia and Ukraine are being repeated in the Asia Pacific region.

“We need to let China and Taiwan settle their differences in peace without pressure from outside, in their own way, and not be injecting the US military into something that could become World War III and, you know, destroy the whole planet,” he said.

Could he hurt Biden?

Let’s be clear: Robert F. Kennedy Jr. poses no direct danger to Biden.

There certainly is no precedent for a sitting president to be seriously challenged within his own party.

Rogan asked Kennedy about his conspiracy theory about his uncle's assassination and his anti-vaccine stance.
Rogan asked Kennedy about his conspiracy theory about his uncle’s assassination and his anti-vaccine stance. Youtube/@PowerfulJRE

As is customary, the Democratic Party apparatus has already chosen its man. There will be no debates; Kennedy will see no institutional support.

Despite this, he is polling a sizeable chunk for a primary challenger against an incumbent president at roughly 20 percent.

The president is sitting at 60 percent, while his other primary challenger, author Marianne Williamson, has 8 percent of the vote.

But just because Kennedy is highly unlikely to win, it doesn’t mean his longshot bid can’t wound Biden — fatally.

The concern within the Biden camp is that RFK Jr. could expose the vulnerabilities of the president for a Republican to take advantage of.

Many point to history.

Phillip Elliot wrote in Time that “past serious primary challengers have proven popular enough to throw incumbent presidents off their game.”

While those challenges might have failed, they “exposed intra-party divisions that helped to make each incumbent a one-term president.”

Etched in Democratic lore is RFK Jr.’s uncle Sen. Ted Kennedy’s challenge to President Jimmy Carter in 1980.

He failed, but the contest between the two weakened the incumbent so much that the Republican outsider, former California Gov. Ronald Reagan, was able to win the election.

Polls suggest that many Democratic voters remain unenthusiastic about backing the 80-year-old Biden for another term. Many consider him too old.

The concern is that a rising RFK Jr. could embarrass Biden in the primaries.

As Eugene Daniels, Ryan Lizza and Rachael Bade wrote in Politico on RFK Jr: “What he is, though, is an annoyance for Biden — and a potentially dangerous one.

“Besides using his legendary name and a national campaign megaphone to espouse fringe views, his outsize polling performance has served as a routine reminder of Biden’s vulnerabilities among his base.”