
Joe Rogan Experience #1999 - Robert Kennedy Jr.
Robert F. Kennedy Jr. (guest), Joe Rogan (host), Narrator, Narrator, Narrator
In this episode of The Joe Rogan Experience, featuring Robert F. Kennedy Jr. and Joe Rogan, Joe Rogan Experience #1999 - Robert Kennedy Jr. explores robert F. Kennedy Jr. challenges vaccines, capture, and U.S. power Robert F. Kennedy Jr. recounts how his work as an environmental lawyer, particularly on mercury pollution, led him into vaccine safety controversies after parents of disabled children pressed him to examine mercury in vaccines. He describes finding what he sees as a large gap between official public‑health assurances and the peer‑reviewed science, alleging regulatory capture, conflicts of interest, and systematic suppression of dissenting views on vaccines and COVID‑19 treatments.
Robert F. Kennedy Jr. challenges vaccines, capture, and U.S. power
Robert F. Kennedy Jr. recounts how his work as an environmental lawyer, particularly on mercury pollution, led him into vaccine safety controversies after parents of disabled children pressed him to examine mercury in vaccines. He describes finding what he sees as a large gap between official public‑health assurances and the peer‑reviewed science, alleging regulatory capture, conflicts of interest, and systematic suppression of dissenting views on vaccines and COVID‑19 treatments.
Kennedy and Rogan explore broader themes of institutional corruption: the revolving door between pharma and regulators, underreported adverse events, industry influence over media and academia, and parallels with past drug disasters and the AIDS and opioid crises. They also discuss environmental toxins like glyphosate, atrazine, and wireless radiation, linking them to chronic disease and developmental harms.
In the second half, Kennedy pivots to foreign policy and economics, condemning U.S. “forever wars,” military‑industrial interests, and the Ukraine war as a proxy conflict driven by neoconservatives at the expense of American middle‑class prosperity. He argues the U.S. should dismantle parts of its empire, end pharmaceutical advertising, break regulatory capture, and redirect resources to rebuilding domestic health and the middle class.
Kennedy frames his presidential run as an attempt to recreate a left‑right populist coalition, invoking his father and uncle’s legacies, calling for peace‑oriented foreign policy, skepticism of entrenched power, and a renewed focus on chronic disease, economic justice, and civil liberties.
Key Takeaways
Interrogate narratives, especially when they come with social penalties for dissent.
Rogan describes uncritically accepting the 'anti‑vax, loony' narrative about Kennedy until he read Kennedy’s book and noticed that critics rarely engaged its specific claims, which suggests the need to personally review primary sources before dismissing controversial positions.
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Look for regulatory capture and financial conflicts whenever a product is both mandated and liability‑free.
Kennedy argues that the 1986 Vaccine Act removed manufacturers’ liability while mandates guaranteed demand, and that user fees and royalties tie regulators’ budgets and personal income to product uptake, weakening incentives to detect or admit safety problems.
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Demand transparent, placebo‑controlled safety trials and all‑cause mortality data for medical products.
He maintains that routine childhood vaccines and COVID vaccines lack robust pre‑licensure placebo trials and emphasizes that absolute risk reductions and overall death data (not just relative efficacy on one endpoint) should be disclosed before mandating interventions.
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Be skeptical when alternative treatments are aggressively discredited during an emergency.
Kennedy links the vilification of ivermectin and hydroxychloroquine to U. ...
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Consider cumulative environmental exposures as contributors to chronic disease trends.
He connects rising burdens of autism, allergies, autoimmune and metabolic disease to a 'toxic soup' that includes vaccines, pesticides like glyphosate and atrazine, and wireless radiation, urging independent research into timing (post‑1989) and potential synergistic effects.
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Recognize how media funding shapes what can be safely discussed.
The conversation highlights how pharma advertising and platform policies drive self‑censorship, takedowns, and skewed coverage (e. ...
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Question open‑ended war aims and their domestic trade‑offs.
Kennedy portrays the Ukraine conflict as a proxy war serving neocon and defense‑industry goals, contrasting the scale of military spending with cuts to social supports and arguing for shifting from military to economic and humanitarian forms of global influence.
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Notable Quotes
“Trusting the experts is not a function of science. That’s the opposite of science.”
— Robert F. Kennedy Jr.
“If what you were saying in that book was not true, I do not understand how you are not being sued.”
— Joe Rogan
“The pharmaceutical industry is not making us safer; it’s not making us healthier. Drugs are the number three killer in our country.”
— Robert F. Kennedy Jr.
“There’s going to be a revolution, and either it can be owned by Donald Trump or we can marshal that energy for a more idealistic vision of our country.”
— Robert F. Kennedy Jr.
“It’s easier to fool somebody than to persuade him that he’s been fooled.”
— Robert F. Kennedy Jr., quoting Mark Twain
Questions Answered in This Episode
Which of Kennedy’s specific scientific claims about vaccines and chronic disease have been most rigorously refuted or supported in the peer‑reviewed literature?
Robert F. ...
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How should societies balance precaution about potential long‑term harms with the urgent need for rapid responses during pandemics?
Kennedy and Rogan explore broader themes of institutional corruption: the revolving door between pharma and regulators, underreported adverse events, industry influence over media and academia, and parallels with past drug disasters and the AIDS and opioid crises. ...
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What concrete mechanisms could realistically dismantle regulatory capture without crippling drug and vaccine development?
In the second half, Kennedy pivots to foreign policy and economics, condemning U. ...
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If the U.S. pivoted from military to economic and humanitarian power projection, what would that look like in Ukraine and other current conflict zones?
Kennedy frames his presidential run as an attempt to recreate a left‑right populist coalition, invoking his father and uncle’s legacies, calling for peace‑oriented foreign policy, skepticism of entrenched power, and a renewed focus on chronic disease, economic justice, and civil liberties.
Get the full analysis with uListen AI
How can media and tech platforms be structured or regulated to protect open scientific debate while still mitigating genuinely harmful misinformation?
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Transcript Preview
(drumbeats) Joe Rogan podcast, check it out.
The Joe Rogan Experience.
Train by day, Joe Rogan podcast by night, all day. (instrumental music)
I like them because they keep people from locking in, but one of the things I wanted to make sure, um, I did in this conversation is not interrupt you. (laughs) Because, uh, it's, it's very frustrating for me when, um, I'm, I'm hearing people talk in these, what should be long-form conversations about very important and nuanced things. And, y- you know, I think one of the things that happens is people are very concerned with letting you say things that is going to get them in trouble or get their channel in trouble. Like, there's, uh, there's people that are doing a lot of self-censoring, and I think they're doing that also when they're having these conversations with you, because they want to establish right away that they have problems with you, and they have problems with some of the positions that a lot of people have problems with. I was one of those people. So, (sighs) when I had heard of you in the past, before I had read your book and before I'd met you, I had no information on you. But there was this narrative, and this narrative was you were anti-vax and you bel- you believed in pseudoscience and you were kind of loony. I didn't look into it at all. I just took it at face value, because that's what everybody had said, and, uh, in my mind, vaccines have been one of the most important medical advancements in human history, saved countless lives, protected children, and I, I thought very strongly that they were important. I didn't have any information on that either. Th- this was also just a narrative that I adopted from, uh, c- cursory reading of news articles and, you know, not really getting into the subject at all. (sighs) Then the pandemic happens, and I had quite a few very reasonable, liberal people, rational people, people that I, I, I trusted their mind, recommend The Real Anthony Fauci, your book. And I'm like, "Robert Kennedy wrote a book about the, about Anthony Fauci? Like, what is this gonna be about?" This is my initial reaction. You've got this, what I perceive to be a kind of fringy-thinking, you know, almost conspiracy theorist type person that's not based in fact, what their argument was, and he had written a book on Anthony Fauci. And this was right around the time where I was w- you know, I was very concerned with the way things were going, that people were just blindly trusting that there was only one way out of this. That was, that was kind of bothering me, particularly when I had known that so many people had gotten the virus, had been fine. So I'm like, "Well, what is, what's the reality of this?" So then I read the book. (sighs) And I've talked about it multiple times on the podcast, but if what you were saying in that book was not true, I do not understand how you are not being sued. You, you, you would, uh, instantly, immediately be sued. The book was very successful. It sold a lot of copies, but it was mysteriously absent from certain, certain bestseller lists. People were a- not promoting that book at all, but through word of mouth and through the time that we live in, through this time where there was so much uncertainty and people were very confused and also suspicious. They were suspicious that they're being told a very, uh, a narrative, and they were starting to remember that, hey, this has happened in the past, these kind of narratives about medications. Th- these, they have happened in the past. They just never happened where this, like, the whole country is being convinced that this is the way to do it. So I read your book, and by the end of the book, it was so, it was so disturbing that sometimes I had to put it away and just read fiction for a few days. I was like, "I don't want this in my head right now." You know? Because a lot of, I listen on audio, and a lot of times I'm listening in the sauna, so I'm listening while I'm already getting tortured.
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