American Thought Leaders - What’s Really Happening at the CDC? | Dr. Robert Malone
Episode Date: September 4, 2025With President Donald Trump recently challenging pharmaceutical companies to “justify success” of their COVID-19 products, I’m sitting down with scientist, physician, and author Dr. Robert Malon...e to get his insights into what’s going on behind the scenes.Dr. Malone is currently serving as a member of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP) and also as a medical advisor for MAHA Action.The recent firing of CDC director Susan Monarez was followed by the resignations of several top CDC officials. At the same time, Robert F. Kennedy Jr. has also announced that the emergency-use authorization for the COVID-19 vaccine products has been rescinded.Is Trump’s recent Truth Social post a turning point in his stance on the COVID-19 vaccines and the success of Operation Warp Speed?What does the future hold for the ACIP? What will they be evaluating in upcoming meetings? And what challenges and major opportunities does Dr. Malone see?Views expressed in this video are opinions of the host and the guest, and do not necessarily reflect the views of The Epoch Times.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
With President Trump challenging pharmaceutical companies to justify success of the COVID-19 products,
and with the recent removal and resignations of several top CDC officials,
I'm sitting down with Dr. Robert Malone to get his insights into what's going on behind the scenes.
He's basically put his foot down and said, guys, I'm tired of this.
Let's get to the bottom of it, get it cleaned up, and move on.
What does the future hold for the CDC's Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices, ASEP?
of which Dr. Malone is one of the members.
What are the challenges and major opportunities he sees?
This is American Thought Leaders.
And I'm Janja Kellogg.
Robert Malone, so good to have you on American Thought Leaders.
Thank you for having me back, Jan. These are interesting times.
Well, incredibly interesting times.
Over the weekend, President Trump had a truth social post
that when I looked at it, I thought to myself,
my goodness, has the world changed?
What was your reaction?
You said, hmm, very interesting,
but I know there was a lot of thought behind that.
Well, of course, it's a little bit tongue-in-cheek having to do,
if you're of a certain age, with Rowan and Martin's Laughan,
where there was a character that always had that tagline,
hmm, very interesting,
when various interesting things were occurring on the show.
In this case, what we've got is President Trump,
Trump putting out a very thoughtful post on truth social, his home platform, in which he is
taking the position that he has questions about the safety and effectiveness of the COVID
products, medical products in particular. He never says vaccines. And he's apparently
perplexed that the information that has been shared with him from
Pfizer and others about the success of Operation Warp Speed is not universally shared by others.
And he is in a very cautious way laying down a challenge to the pharmaceutical manufacturing
industry that they make public the information that they've been sharing privately with him.
and one can infer that the logic here is that this will be made public and subjected to public scrutiny.
And at Yon, you know, as well as anybody, that there was an attempt to not make any of the information available,
having to do with the clinical trial data and post-marketing data acquired by Pfizer in particular.
for decades, that this was all going to be sequestered, and it required a court determination,
a federal court determination, to insist that the FDA, go ahead and make those data public.
These are the data that were summarized and analyzed by various groups, but notoriously by Naomi
Wolf and the Steve Bannon mega policy posse.
that resulted in Naomi's book, the Pfizer papers.
And so the president here, for the first time, I think, is publicly questioning whether or not the narrative that he has been provided and the information that he's been shown is aligned with or fully transparent and is insisting that with data that's otherwise available.
and insisting that the manufacturers provide the data that they've been showing him
because the inference is it's discordant with the data that others throughout the world,
including other regulatory agencies, have been identifying and disclosing publicly.
And that comes on the heels of years of his insistence that Operation Work speed,
was a huge success, a major breakthrough. And I don't think you can question that bureaucratically
Operation Warp Speed achieved far in excess of what anybody would have expected would come out
of the U.S. federal bureaucracy in terms of timelines, in terms of overcoming bureaucratic obstacles
and really pioneering a whole-of-government approach to a health care crisis, a public health policy
crisis. But the question is, were too many corners cut? And were people mandated and otherwise
persuaded, enticed, compelled to accept a medical product that wasn't as safe and effective
as they were told? And this is particularly important in that most, if not all,
of the major criteria that underpin modern biomedical ethics were breached in that response.
And informed consent was not only not required or enabled, but it was actively suppressed,
is what currently the data indicate, is that the communications, both from the sponsors
and from the federal government, actively suppressed information about potential.
adverse events in particular. And that, that's just not acceptable in terms of modern medical
bioethics, that it became the standard. So it is a huge event that President Trump, on his
truth social platform, raised these questions, that he is really avoided asking in the past.
and that's been perhaps the largest reservation that his face has had about him.
And certainly to make America healthy again, grassroots movements have had about President Trump,
his insistence that this program was a spectacular success.
You know, the president talks about the CDC being ripped apart over the question, indeed,
of, you know, what was the effect of these products?
And maybe, why don't you chart for me a little bit of the process of getting here?
Because, you know, this didn't come out of the blue.
There was a whole lot of activity.
I mean, almost too much to cover as a media company, frankly, or as yourself on your platform.
But give me, why don't we start with where this actually came from?
What catalyzed this?
So I agree.
Those were remarkably strong words from the president ripped apart.
and let's walk back over the last three weeks.
Three Fridays ago in the evening, about 5 p.m.,
a, I think we can best say, unhinged young gentleman,
decided to open fire.
The term has been used as spray of bullets
on the outside of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Building.
Unfortunately, a police protection security personnel assigned to the CDC,
who is a father of a young family, lost his life in this attack.
No one else did.
The facility itself was not breached.
And by the way, ever since that event three Fridays ago,
Virtually the entire CDC staff has been on paid leave, which they will need to return
to work on September 15th. So five weeks of paid leave for the traumatic event of bullets
being sprayed in downtown Atlanta against their workplace. So that then was followed by
various statements from Senator Blumenthal that were a little personal for me,
in which he reacted to Friday Funnies Mean Roundup and called for Senator Kennedy
to fire me from the volunteer position at the ACIP, which I wouldn't mind if I didn't.
I'm doing this because Bobby want me to.
And then that happened in the context of what's been about seven weeks of slow walking of the ACIP subcommittee working group on the coronavirus vaccines attempting to get CDC senior leadership to authorize what's called a
terms of reference statement, which for those of you that are not federal bureaucrats, you might
just call it a scope of work. But terms of reference is the terminology that is approved within the
CDC, as well as authorization to query the FDA for the data that were used to support the
cyber director,
Vene Prasad's
decision to
authorize
the Moderna product
for high-risk
children and
adolescents,
which is still
pending that authorization, but that had to go
through CDC
approval,
vetting, lawyers,
et cetera,
And there was a concerted effort to control what that agenda would be.
And it finally came to the point last Monday, apparently.
I infer this.
And by the way, I just need to give the disclaimer, Jan,
I'm speaking in my personal capacity, not as a member of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
or the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices or as a special government employee or as a
representative of the U.S. government. My opinions are my own in this interview. And I haven't spoken
to Bobby directly or Stephanie about this cascade of events, just to be clear. What I've learned
from reading tidbits from the likes of stat news and the Washington Post, etc. And then a little bit of
chatter from insiders, not Bobby or Stephanie, was that last Monday, so two Mondays ago,
the secretary called in the newly confirmed, only been on the job for about a month,
director of the Centers for Disease Control. And there was a discussion that apparently
included the issue of letting go certain CDC senior staff. I infer those senior staff may have been
involved in the slow walking of the ACIP terms of reference document. And I know that in
prior statements in the context of her confirmation, the director had made a statement to the
effect that she would not terminate any of the existing CDC senior staff.
It appears that the secretary asked the director of the CDC to terminate some of these
senior long-term staff that were insisting on basically controlling the agenda for the upcoming
ACIP COVID subcommittee work group and what they would be allowed to consider as they would
investigate and make recommendations to the director of the CDC concerning the three COVID vaccine
products that are currently on the agenda for discussion at the upcoming ACIP.
meeting, which Bobby has insisted occur in September and is now finally scheduled for the
18th and 19th of this month. So stay tuned. If you're enjoying the last week, you'll enjoy the week
of the 17th and the 18th even more. And with the decision apparently by the secretary coming
out of the meeting with the director to ask the director to vacate her position.
position. And then last Wednesday, the Washington Post came out with a brief breaking news article
that, in fact, the director had been asked to leave. The director apparently had already
engaged attorneys to work to neutralize the decision by the secretary and allow her to retain
her congressionally authorized position, claiming that the secretary didn't have the authority
to terminate the director of the CDC that reports to him. Somewhere in there, apparently,
I'm not clear the dates, but the director of the CDC apparently spoke to Senator Cassidy
and complained that the secretary for HHS, RFK, Jr., was politically interfering with the processes, the science occurring at the CDC.
And then almost within an hour, so it's been a pretty compressed news cycle, as you say,
The Washington Post came out with this story on that Wednesday.
Near as I can tell, I think it's four CDC personnel, senior personnel, resigned almost immediately after that announcement.
And in the resignation letters asserted again the narrative that the secretary was politically interfering with the science at the CDC.
I infer that the science at the CDC that they're referring to,
they're claiming had to do with this terms of reference at the ACIP working group.
The person who's functionally serving a spokesperson for this group of people that resign
has denied that that's the case, that there's a cause and effect having to do the terms of reference.
and that his objection was that there were policy decisions being made.
I'm unclear what policy decisions he's referring to,
and the chairperson of the working group, Retz F. Levy,
has given an interview with authorization by Andrew Nixon of ATHS Communications
with Dr. Damasi, who writes a substack,
in which Dr. Levy, a full professor of risk management
and identification at MIT,
so no small chops there academically and scientifically
and scientifically,
is, makes it very clear that there was,
absolutely no policy discussions between himself and the individual or individuals that have
resigned that are claiming that this was a policy dispute, but that, in fact, the only
subject of dispute and subject of discussion was the scope of what would the what the
ACIP working group for COVID vaccines would be allowed to investigate.
And the position taken by the senior CDC staff that resigned was that the CDC has already done all the necessary investigations about, for instance, the adverse events.
The only adverse event that is occurring with the COVID vaccine MRNA products is myocarditis.
There are other ones that have not met statistical significance.
That's a different, nuanced question.
of how they're determining that.
But this is to not be on the table for the ACIP to investigate.
What this teaches, in my opinion, is that historically,
what has been observed by Benny and complained about by many
is that the ACIP seems to be a rubber stamp organization.
And this has often been attributed to financial,
conflicts of interest, and certainly those have existed.
And many of the ACIP members and the Working Group subcommittee members have been drawn
from the various medical professional societies, which have been documented as pretty
much universally receiving major funding from the pharmaceutical industry.
So the secretary in deciding to
retire, the former ACIP committee, that's his words,
had indicated that there was this chronic financial conflict of interest
that had characterized many of the prior CDACIP members,
and that it was necessary to start over.
So those were the claims,
and then they were reinforced through a number of venues.
First off, there was a protest at the CDC that was apparently a previously scheduled rally
that was mostly comprised of the approximately 600 full-time employee personnel
that had been made redundant by the Doge effort when Elon Musk was still functioning as a special government employee.
and then their termination had been delayed because they had filed a court case
seeking injunction against their termination, and they just lost it.
They just lost the court case, so they were officially fired.
So when you read the headlines, Bobby Kennedy has fired over 600 FTE at the CDC.
Well, actually, that happened weeks ago.
It's just that the courts finally allowed it to happen.
So a lot of these people had a rally protest.
test in front of the CDC. Apparently, they're not worried about shooters. And in that context,
some CDC personnel walked out and joined them, one including the chief medical officer,
and the other being this individual that has really become a bit of a media darling recently,
been on ABC News, etc., speaking about the narrative
that they've resigned because the secretary, RFK, has politicized the CDC and
someone and also introduced the narrative, why this person did this, I don't know, that they
feared that the next thing that was going to happen was that the ACIP was going to recommend
that the hepatitis B neonate vaccination policy would be changed.
and what a tragedy this would be. I think if you polled American parents, most American parents would
disagree with this senior bureaucrat from the CDC that has resigned. But that created a whole new
narrative that Ron Paul felt that he had to Senator Cassidy endorse that. And Ron Paul then,
who is actually a physician, as is Senator Cassidy, contradicted.
Senator Cassidy and said, no, there isn't a good justification for hepatitis B vaccination of
the newborn. So the president then dropped this post that we've discussed, and that set off
another whole round of social media turmoil. I haven't encountered that level of hate directed
at me. Oh, at least for about three weeks since I
was appointed to the ACIP. And there was a whole round of media posts about me. So clearly a
concerted effort to attack the secretary, de-legentilize him, accuse him of interfering in the public
policy positions of the CDC, which to my eyes has no merit. But this then reaches this point
where we're at today where, you know, this morning I had conference calls with the other members
of the ACIP COVID working group, but we have four meetings scheduled because we have to jam
all of our hearings in between now and when we have a slide deck available for the other
ACIP members and draft recommendations that will be rolled out during the 18th and the night.
So everything is compressed, like usual. It all got delayed because of this slow walking. Now it all has to be done in a very short time frame. And we're not going to be able to do a very comprehensive job on that. Last week, the secretary also announced that the emergency use authorization for the COVID products had finally been rescinded. The emergency medical emergency had been declared ended.
months ago, but they managed to kind of retain the EUA authorization for these products,
even though there was no longer a medical emergency. And that's finally ended. And so now we have
termination of that and three products authorized Moderna Pfizer and Novavax, you know,
in short, for limited indications of basically elderly and populations of populations at high risk
of at least one high risk factor, undefined by the FDA, what that meant, which is a part of
the remit now that's been tossed into the lap of the ACIP, because we're obligated by statute
to advise the secretary at the meeting following any FDA determination about a vaccine.
So the FDA basically took this hot potato through it, right straight in their lap,
in the midst of all the set of chaos.
And there we are.
Robert, from what Dr. Levy, what Retz-F said,
it seems like they wanted to keep the, any discussion of,
COVID vaccine injury out of the scope of the work that the subcommittee was going to do.
Now, explain that to me.
I'm perplexed also in that the subcommittee is supposed to be independent of the agency.
This is fundamental to the FACA, the Federal Advisory Committee Act.
the FACA structure is supposed to allow outside experts to independently assess and advise
key personnel and decision makers within the federal government.
But the position taken by these individuals that have resigned, apparently, was that, in fact, they were the ones that were authorized to deter.
what the scope would be for the ACIP's investigations and decision-making,
and that the CDC had gathered all the necessary data concerning adverse events and
effectiveness of these products, and that those data from the CDC were available for the ACIP to
evaluate and that it was out of scope for the ACIP to consider other sources of information.
That, I think, is a perverse interpretation of the charter, but it is the clearest indication of how
we got to this point where the ACIP had basically become a mouthpiece for a
the interests of both the CDC bureaucracy and the pharmaceutical industry.
Because as opposed to a check, you know, on the system, because really that's what it's supposed to be, right?
It's supposed to be an independent assessment and advisory to the director, which is what the charter is.
So where does that leave Dr. Levy and the subgroup, which I understand is going to be meeting soon?
So our first meeting, I think, is tomorrow and then another one on Friday and then two next week.
And so now those folks that were obstructing and insisting on controlling the process and the scope are no longer there.
And new people have stepped into those roles.
And as Retzif Levy, Dr. Levy, elaborated in this notable interview,
you. Currently, all indications are that we will be able to move forward as partners
with these CDC personnel, and that is absolutely our approach to this. There are those that
insist that there should be some accountability for these actions, but from the standpoint of
the committee, it's not our job. We're not in charge of accountability or it's also not
within our mission and remit to assess or do fact-finding on any things that might have occurred
over the last few years. Our focus is going forward. Our focus is on the current circulating
strains of SARS-Gobie-2, on the currently available products, and advising the director of the CDC
on what the data show as the safety effectiveness
and utility of these products should be.
And to follow the data, wherever it should lead.
So current discussions include all of those that will be
testifying to the subcommittee,
may well include some members of the
prior subcommittee that was terminated under the Secretary's order when the ASIP was
retired and the new enrolled in. We're absolutely on board with having a full diversity of
opinion and commentary. And it may well be looking forward. I, I,
speculate that there may be a presentation to the general ACIP and the public that has bullet
points for those that are advocating current policy and those that have testified about things
that might cause reservations about current policy.
one of and what's on the table is what would be recommended and the recommendation range of options for ACIP is really pretty constrained and it doesn't include sorry MAHA base it doesn't include throwing them in jail it's very straightforward we can we can recommend that these vaccines be administered in
alignment with what FDA is authorized, we can recommend what's called shared decision-making
in which there must be a discussion and informed consent between a physician and the patient
or the caregiver that is responsible for the patient.
So father, mother, et cetera, for the child.
And then there is the option of no recommendation.
And certainly if, for instance,
are a request to the director of Sieber to share with the ACIP,
the data he and his staff used to support the decision,
to authorize these products for these populations, it's reasonable that the ACIP should
receive that same information that the FDA used in their decision making. Otherwise, we can't
really know what was the basis of the decision. We also, you might imagine, would very much
need to receive the documentation about what constitutes a
special population or a population at high risk. It's not good enough to just say
anybody that high risk or has one risk factor, well, define what that is. And what are the
data to support that? Not all risk factors are the same. Somebody that's recovering from cancer
or has certain conditions, let's say cystic fibrosis, may not be the same as a child who is
just moderately obese. So what are those data? What are those criteria that supports
that? And if those data aren't aligned or aren't made available, then one can reasonably
infer that it's not possible for the committee to formulate a recommendation. If we don't
have the data and our charter is to follow the data, then how can we make
a recommendation when the data don't exist, just on good faith. Sorry, I can't do that anymore.
So that's a hot topic. And then another one, looking forward, if we were to, if the committee
was to make a recommendation here, there, or anywhere about shared decision making, that implies
that there must be a dialogue and informed consent between patient or patient representative,
and the physician, prescribing physician, it also implies that these products would be available
by a prescription, but not necessarily you can just walk up to Walmart and get a jab in the butt
or in the shoulder or whatever. So already a lot of the reports are that CVS and Walmart,
etc. are pulling back from their campaigns for administering these various products.
So if this is going to be shared decision-making, there has to be informed consent.
Why there doesn't have to be informed consent in the case of what is functionally a standard of care mandate,
if the ACIP recommends and the CDC director endorses use for a particular indication is beyond me.
as somebody schooled in medical ethics, informed consent is the cornerstone of all medical
practice.
But that's how it's been interpreted.
That's the system we have.
But if we're going to move towards shared decision making, which the pediatricians hate,
by the way, they just want to cut and dry, you know, if you're 36 months and you have,
you're overweight or whatever the risk factor is, and you get it.
That's the cut and dried world of modern corporate medicine.
So they don't like the idea of shared decision making where they're going to have to have a discussion with a patient and justify why this particular child or that particular elderly person should receive the product.
We believe that it's necessary, it's the responsibility of the ACIP to provide the physician with.
guidance about the information that must be shared with the patient.
So we can't just say, well, you have to have informed consent and it's shared decision-making,
but it's up to you to figure out what you have to discuss with the patient.
Now, that doesn't really work and it doesn't help anybody.
So part of what we are going to seek to do is to provide clear guidance.
It's fact-based document that, in fact,
A, B, C, or D are known risks, and F, G, H, and I are potential risks.
And I'm pretty sure that one of those risks is going to be death.
So stay tuned on that.
But the database is being independently examined, I think, for the first time.
Robert, the last time you were on the show, actually, with Dr. Retz-F-Levy.
One of the topics we covered was the difference in your vote and Dr. Levy's when ASIP was voting on authorizing these RSV monoclonal antibodies.
And since you've actually seemed to have some second thoughts about your decision and actually have been asking questions about whether you are going to be trusting CDC presentations to ASIP going forward.
I'm wondering if you could just unpack that for me, please.
So this kind of illuminates one of the key problems in relying on the bureaucratic structure to assess data without peer review.
And in the case of the ACIP, which ostensibly might function as a peer review structure, being presented with the data the day before the meeting, actually the night before the meeting.
So no chance to evaluate it or ask questions.
In the case of the RSV products, it was a very strange presentation that was made in which information about other RSV products was more prominent than that of the monoclonal antibody that was actually a subject for discussion.
So a lot of kind of ancillary information that wasn't specifically relevant to the question at hand was presented.
and the information that was presented, now in retrospect, appears to have been incomplete.
And the claim advanced most clearly, once again, by this Ph.D. investigative reporter,
and she, her Ph.D. is not in English literature or women's studies. It's directly relevant to this topic of imaginicity
and immunology.
So Marianne Damasi, working with others, evaluated, in particular two of the signals that were
present in the data, but not entirely clear in the presentations at that ACIP meeting having
to do with the new RSV monoclonal antibody product that we collectively ended up endorsing
for virtually all newborns, much like the hepatitis B vaccine.
but we had a couple of, we had two precisely dissenters in that vote.
We voted not to recommend, one of which was the same Ritzif Levy.
And there were the particular issue that raised Retzif's, you can almost think of it as spidey sense,
is intuitive sense that something wasn't right.
Was data having to do with deaths in clinical trials?
Deaths is a rare event in this case, fortunately,
post inoculation with these monoclonal antibodies,
which are not vaccines.
But there was an imbalance.
This, you know, all the infamous,
there's never a proper negative control with the vaccine products,
Well, in these studies, there were proper negative controls.
And there was an imbalance in deaths with more deaths, slightly more, in the inoculated group compared to the control group.
Furthermore, that trend of statistically not significant but still numerically split with the same trend was present in the
studies involving the other marketed monoclonal antibody product.
So Retzif's, as I recall, his particular objection was that there were these trends in the
data about excess deaths that were in, I get, this gets back to another nuance in clinical trials.
A death is a severe adverse event, full stop.
and usually will trigger a stop to trial enrollment, clinical trial enrollment.
And someone has to adjudicate the decision whether that death was associated with the product or not associated with product, basically.
And the person who gets to make that determination is the principal investigator from the study.
Principal investigator for the study is often working for a contract research organization that,
gets its money from the sponsor, say Merck.
So the principal investigator, one might infer,
might not be entirely objective about,
or there might be some even unintentional bias
towards making a determination that a death is
unrelated to the product.
Because if the death was related to the product,
Then there is a huge cascade involving disruption of the study, major revisions,
delaying timelines, which means delaying when you're going to get paid, et cetera, et cetera.
So a lot of structural disincentives in clinical research to make, for a principal investor,
you make a termination that a death was related to the product.
So in all these cases, in the treatment group, the principal investigators made the determination that the deaths were unrelated to the product.
Now, there's historically examples where this was the case, for instance, in some of the cholesterol lowering drugs that are particularly potent, there's a notorious example of suicides.
deaths being higher in the treatment group than the untreatment group, and yet the determination
that it's unrelated because they were suicides.
But it turns out that when you draw down cholesterol, you draw down cholesterol out of the brain,
people get depressed, and then they have more suicides.
So it actually is related.
But at first blush, when you just look at the data, oh, come on, they're taking a cholesterol,
lowering drug, and they commit suicide, clearly, that's unrelated, right?
And historically, that has just been the way the system works.
And the FDA blesses that and endorses it and it's the way things are.
I think that what this death signal teaches, and I suspect we've had some informal discussions.
I think that there's support for this.
When we have death data like that, the ASIP is going to need to require that we get our hands on the primary
clinical records associated with those events.
So we can make our own assessment
of whether those were related or unrelated.
Clearly, we need to do something more
than just accepting what comes at us
from the pharmaceutical industry.
The other signal that was worrisome
had to do with seizures.
And in particular,
there was a timeline
that appears on the surface
to have been arbitrary,
wherein seizures that happened after that timeline were determined to be unrelated to the product
whereas seizures before that timeline were and once again there's an imbalance there's more seizures
in the vex in the inoculated group than the uninoculated group but it didn't rise to
significant statistical significance it's just under the threshold of statistical
predetermined statistical significance.
But there's this, what appears to be an arbitrary cutoff.
And in fact, there was one or more additional seizures after that timeline.
And when you take those data and wrap them in together with seizures prior to the cutoff date
that is not justified, wasn't unjustified in the presentation, I'm sure they have a reason,
but they haven't shared it with us.
If you lump that, suddenly the seizure signal,
is statistically significant compared to the comparison group.
The appearance is that at a minimum, the data presented to the ASIP on very short notice
has the potential appearance, I'm choosing my words, of having been, let's say, selectively
reported, and that with just a slight turn to the knob,
the interpretation would have been very different.
And on the basis of that, we're making a decision.
I voted for universal administration of this product
to the newborns during RSV season
whose mothers were not previously vaccinated.
That's hence my objection in my sense of, frankly, betrayal,
is that I made a very public vote
on a rather sensitive issue
at a time in which the ACIP was, this new ACIP was under intense fire, I was under
intense fire by corporate media, unqualified, you know, crazy anti-vaxxer, that whole
you know, media characterization that's promoted about me. And yes, I am an anti-vaxxer if you
define anti-vaxxer as somebody who's against vaccine mandates, which is how
Webster's defines it. So I'm guilty as charged of not being for vaccine mandates, which is defined by Webster's as an anti-vaxxer. But they don't put all that context in. They just say, that guy Malone, he's crazy. He's an anti-vaxor. So all this was coming down. We were under direction from leadership to be gentlemanly, I think, is one word. In our initial interactions with the ACIP,
The press was on us like flies all the way through that.
They were staying at the Emory Hotel where we were at.
The long lenses were out focusing on each of out of us.
You can see the photographs of me asking questions.
And they were looking for us to make a misstep and to do something that would fit into their narrative of being a bunch of rabid anti-vaxer crazy unqualified people.
So that was the context.
I voted with Cody Meisner, who is a member of the ACIP now, and was a member of the RSV subgroup,
who very carefully walked me through the logic of what the prior working group had determined as it related to these products.
and I trusted how the data were presented.
And what I said in reposting Damasi's substack was that I no longer feel comfortable
assuming good faith and transparency and integrity in the presentations.
In this case, the presentation was provided by a contractor, not actually by CDC personnel.
that works for one of the large HMOs.
I believe it was Kaiser Family Foundation, as I recall.
So it wasn't CDC personnel making the presentation.
And so nobody within CDC can actually directly be held responsible for that.
But this raises, you know, not to say that CDC personnel are liable.
But we've all heard the saw that, you know, statistics can lie.
They can be used to distort information.
And one of the ways that statistical analysis of clinical data can be manipulated is through
choosing the analysis window so that if you're right at the threshold of something
being statistically significant, you can shift the results by very carefully choosing how you
analyze the data.
And if you're going to choose a particular cutoff in a sensitive situation like this,
our position now is that you have to have clear justification for why you did that.
And we're now insisting that there be a lot more transparency about what
has been done to validate these findings, and we are seeking to have more independent
scrutiny and review of the information presented to the public and the ACIP in these
presentations.
And that's consistent with the Secretary's mandate that we follow the data.
And in order to follow the data, the data have to have integrity.
The analysis has to have integrity because we don't have the time nor does the public
to go through line listings of clinical trial data and re-evaluate them.
We have to have summary statistics and position of the CDC as it relates to, for instance,
the adverse events associated with COVID products, is if it doesn't meet statistical significance,
it didn't happen.
So if you have signals that are rare and they don't rise to the level of a sufficient number
of signals to meet a statistical test, then the position is essentially they didn't happen.
That's not valid.
That's a distortion.
And it's a distortion that is common in epidemiologic MPH-type public health analyses.
That basically the position of modern public health is, of course, the greatest good for the greatest number.
And that functionally, what their position is, is that the only truth in a world in which truth is become based on feelings and subjective criteria,
The only truth that they will endorse is that truth which is validated through
statistical significance and their particular epidemiologic assessments.
Any other data are anecdotal and irrelevant.
And that's just not okay.
And it flies in the face.
This is at the root of the complaints by so many in the American public that they have experienced
first-hand or second-hand, in most cases.
Adverse events associated with these products
that are more than just myocarditis.
But the CDC denies that that's the case.
And hence, you have a public
that, for this and other reasons, no longer trust the CDC.
Of course, that I'm getting back to the cascade,
amazing cascade of the news cycle,
about the CDC over the last three weeks,
the positions taken by those that have resigned and their backgrounds
have raised even more questions about the CDC's integrity,
caused other authors to go back and look at the history of the Tuskegee experiment,
which is a very dark time in CDC history,
and many of the other historic transgressions associated with the CDC.
and revisit those things.
And it's, as I posted somewhat facetiously,
I don't think that those that have been doing the media circus right now
and calling for the secretary's resignation appreciated the stricand effect,
wherein if you go and try to cover things up and make excuses,
All you do is you get more public scrutiny and attention of whatever the topic area is,
and you better be prepared for that scrutiny attention and have your own house in order
because it's going to get examined.
And that is pretty much what's happened over the last three days.
So bottom line here is ASIP has been tasked with looking at the safety and efficacy of vaccines
and other products, of course.
And it seems like the CDC was basically resisting your ability to do that, in fact.
Am I reading that right?
That's certainly my impression.
There absolutely has been a lot of barriers to moving forward as a fully independent organization,
as opposed to one that is very dependent on the opinions, structures, and agendas, and subcommittee membership
advocated by CDC senior administrators.
So I believe that RETSIF and the committee are well within the committee charter to seek to function independently.
But there has been enormous resistance to that idea.
And it's very strange for those for myself and for anybody on the outside to grapple with why would CDC personnel be so actively resisting, asking the independent advisory committee asking questions about issues such as the safety and effectiveness of the,
these products and the wisdom of the current childhood vaccine schedule for many of these products,
for example. It seems, I think, for the average person, self-evident that an independent
advisory committee would need to ask independent questions about the safety and effectiveness
of these products and the underlying immunology associated with how they're working or not
working, interactions, potential effects in terms of class switching, which is functionally
a form of immunosuppression, something I've been attacked for saying is occurring, and yet the
data are very clear. But, and that this is a functionally a version of an acquired immunode
deficiency, it's not AIDS, but it is an acquired immune deficiency, which is the formal
definition of that category of diseases acquired immune deficiency syndrome doesn't mean that it's
triggering HIV disease but the press is not very good with nuance and I think that that
in particular this grassroots movement, this grassroots movement of Make America Healthy again
that has got so much momentum and interest on the part of the public is insistent that these
questions be asked.
They have lost confidence for good reason in the decisions that had been promoted by the
CDC and in particular by some of these staff.
The investigator MDMPH that has resigned so publicly was specifically brought on to be Rochelle Walensky's specialist in COVID.
This is the same person that advocated for universal American vaccination against Monkeypox.
This is somebody who is intimately involved in the decisions about social distancing, mask use,
lockdowns and the pivot within the CDC under the influence of the teachers union away from
a historically more rational position on children and schooling and lockdowns that was involved
in the decision-making to pivot to advocate for these harsher measures.
And the public, you know, in retrospect, the data are quite clear that major harms have occurred.
Financial harms, learning harms, socialization harms, educational harms.
There's discussions about this being a lost generation educationally consequent to these,
what are fundamentally CDC positions.
So we have entered a new era.
And as mentioned in your lead, when we first started this segment, talking about the president's statement, this has changed the entire landscape.
And the CDC is receiving a lot more scrutiny.
And again, let me emphasize.
CDC has a lot of good people there.
There's some folks that have advanced questionable policy that is being challenged,
but the ones that are remaining that are working with a Retzif Levy,
a subcommittee, and the ACIP in general are fully committed to working in an open,
transparent, cooperative way with the appointees that are currently
participating in the advisory committee on immunization practices.
And we at the ACIP and the workgroups serve at the pleasure of the secretary.
If the secretary decides that it's time for all of us to be retired or just for me to be
retired or whoever, it's his call.
And likewise, the secretary serves at the pleasure of the president.
And the president making this statement about seeking,
transparency from the manufacturers
concerning the data that have been presented to him
appears to me to be a tacit support and
acknowledgement of the Secretary's position
that we deserve to get to the bottom of these data.
He doesn't want the news cycle dominated
compared to stopping the Russian-Ukrainian conflict
or managing the Israeli
Palestinian conflict or Iranian nuclear weapons or trade policy.
This is, you know, for some of us, this is important.
But if you think about the president's portfolio, he's basically put his foot down and said,
guys, I'm tired of this.
Let's get to the bottom of it.
Get it cleaned up and move on.
And I fully support the president in that.
That is where we're from, coming from at ACIP is, let's, you know, it's a show me the data.
Well, and I think that's the thing that really struck me here, and this administration, you know,
part of its mandate or part of its promise was that it would provide some transparency.
And it seems to me that this particular posts is a demand for that kind of transparency.
Another thing that people overlook, and I'm often asked the question, what is the bond between the secretary and the president?
They both have a firm bedrock commitment to families and children in America.
And if you look at what's going on with the Maha Commission, you look at the president's statement with the rollout of the first commission report in which he emphasized that if we don't change something,
something, we're on track for our children to live shorter, sicker lives than their parents.
That's where Bobby and the president have strong, uh, shared commitment is over American
children. And all of this relates directly to that issue. Are American children being well
served in federal vaccine policy or not? And, uh, I, I know that
The secretary is committed to having that question addressed.
And I've heard through back channels that the president is also personally committed
to having that issue addressed comprehensively.
And it's our intention at the ACIP, in my opinion, not speaking for the ACIP,
that we meet disbanding in an open, transparent, open-minded fashion,
despite all of the horrible things the press is saying about me and my colleagues,
if it turns out that I was wrong about the data having to do with adverse events, deaths, etc.,
stratified by age and risk factor associated with these products,
I will say so, just like I said that I was wrong in my vote with the RSV until prove it otherwise.
And if the data show that I was wrong on the COVID products, I'll be glad.
I'll be the first one to announce that I was wrong and my detractors were correct.
I don't think that's going to happen, but time will tell.
Well, Dr. Robert Malone, it's such a pleasure to have had.
you on. Thanks for having me on, Jan, and thanks for the opportunity to help your listeners
navigate these challenging news cycles. Thank you all for joining Dr. Robert Malone and me
on this episode of American Thought Leaders. I'm your host, Janja Kellick.