In a letter broadcast to the Maryland campus in the Food and Drug Administration on Friday morning, Robert F. Kennedy Junior himself as Minister of Health in the country with a zig
Mr. Kennedy told the agency’s employees, in the midst of a 20 percent loss of their workforce under his reform in the Ministry of Health and Humanitarian Services, to boldly avoid the protection of the companies that organize it.
Workers ’layoffs, voluntary departures and financing cuts have already removed sections that control tobacco supervision, drug approval, cow milk and cheese test for bird flu, and food safety that monitors and protect consumers from food diseases.
In his comments on Friday, Mr. Kennedy suggested that the reason that the agency did not agree to “alternative medicines” because of her experience of good heels. The Food and Drug Administration has already been accused of suppressing raw milk, cellular treatments and stem cells. The veterans of the agency have argued that alternative treatments often fail to pass safety and effectiveness standards.
He urged the employees to resist the temptation of service of a small group of wealthy companies at the expense of public health. “We want to separate from this so that we can make our children healthy,” he said, according to a video and a copy of his speech that was shared with the New York Times.
At another stage, he said: “The deep state is real,” a reference to the sprawling federal bureaucracy that President Trump blamed as an obstacle to achieving his goals in his first term.
Mr. Kennedy also called “FDA” “sock doll” for industries that are supposed to organize, language It has been used in the past.
Andrew Nixon, a spokesman for the Ministry of Health and Humanitarian Services, said in a statement that with his comments on Friday, Mr. Kennedy said to the truth that many Americans already know. “
The drug makers have benefited from a series of efforts made by the FDA to accelerate some drug approvals or encourage companies to develop drugs for serious diseases that lack treatments. The agency officials said the programs aim to help patients.
Mr. Kennedy said The “rapid path regulations” were goodwill. But over time, he said: “They have become tools for job occupants, and the second is very strong in this industry, to exclude dissidents, as you know, rare diseases and alternative medications and this type of things.”
Mr. Kennedy also urged the FDA employees to speak if their Greenight products are inappropriate products. “If your boss makes mistakes, if they agree to something that should not be approved, then we want to hear,” he said.
Dr. Marti Macari, the New Food and Drug Administration Commissioner, presented Mr. Kennedy at Friday meeting and supported his goals to form a healthier food supplies. He admitted that the discounts in the agency were “difficult on the ground” for some employees. He said that the changes were “aimed at monotheism, as they are more efficient and created more teamwork.”
Mr. Kennedy and Dr. Macari were broadcast on a video that was broadcast on the agency campus on the outskirts of Maryland.
Mr. Kennedy mentioned in the speech about being a child visiting his father, Public Prosecutor Robert F. Kennedy, at the Ministry of Justice in Washington and watching the Pyregerian hawks that nest in the dome in the old post office building. He also discussed his experiences with persons with mental disabilities and battles he waged as an environmental lawyer.
Mr. Kennedy also complained about the rules governing the agency’s food department that allows companies to believe that the new ingredients are generally recognized as safe. The scale initially covered the ingredients such as salt or vinegar as is acceptable in food without review. In the following years, thousands of ingredients were added to food supply without notification or test by the agency.
Food companies must provide components reviews for FDA inspectors on the site, but these searches can occur every five years or less. Mr. Kennedy called for the end of the food companies to start that the ingredients are safe.
“We literally do not test chemicals before adding them to our food,” he said. “Everything is sealed by the industry as it is generally safe.”
He continued to attribute the country’s diabetes rates to the vulnerability, adding that sugar also plays a role.
The speech reminded us of the Social Media Center from Mr. Kennedy in October, accusing the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) of launching “war on public health”. He said that the agency participated in “aggressive suppression” of a group of unsuccessful or unsafe products, including raw milk, pickled compounds, and transalcatin, and “anything else is advancing in human health and cannot get a patent by medicines.”
The post continued: “If you are working in the FDA (FDA) and you are part of this corrupt system, I have two letters to you: 1. Keep your records, and 2. Pack your bags.”
The agency is still suffering from thousands of cuts in voluntary jobs and departures in the weeks that were appointed by the Minister of Health, Mr. Kennedy. Among the FDA employees (FDA) who have left in recent weeks are the employees studying drugs for secondary products that can cause cancer and others who work with international food safety employees to try to prevent contaminated products from entering the United States.
The cuts in some areas were so deep that the former FDA officials suggested that they be exposed to billions of dollars as fees paid by the pharmaceutical industry to the agency to ensure that drug approval process is adequately employed.
The drug makers were concerned about what Mr. Kennedy’s leadership meant for their interests. They are concerned that the agency’s cuts will slow down the drug reviews, including the beginning of clinical trials, and will add delay to the final approval.
A Public message Dozens of biotechnology investors and executives said that industrial leaders were “very concerned about the agency’s current situation and its future.”
The letter said: “Some of us have already faced organizational difficulties that we believe are the consequences of the loss of food and drug management of experienced employees.”