Skip to content
Search AI Powered

Latest Stories

RFK Jr. Gets Epic History Lesson After Claiming Tourette's Wasn't Around When He Was A Kid

Robert F. Kennedy Jr.
Alex Wong/Getty Images

After Health and Human Services Secretary RFK Jr. claimed to reporters that he'd never heard of "injuries" like Tourette Syndrome when he was a kid, the internet stepped in to give him a blunt fact-check.

Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. was swiftly fact-checked after he claimed to reporters that he'd never heard of "injuries" like Tourette's Syndrome when he was younger.

While the roots of neurology and neurosurgery can be traced back to prehistoric times, the academic study of these fields didn’t begin until the 16th century. It wasn’t until the 20th century, however, that neurology and neurosurgery became formally organized as separate medical specialties in Europe and the United States, marked by the creation of professional societies independent of internal medicine, psychiatry, and general surgery.


Just because formal recognition took that long to achieve doesn't mean disorders like Tourette Syndrome didn't exist—but in the world according to Kennedy, if he didn't personally experience it, it never happened.

He told reporters:

"These are broad categories of neurological disorders... ADHD, speech language delays, narcolepsy, Tourette's, ASD [autism]. These are all things I never heard of when I was a kid. They were not part of the nomenclaure. They were not part of the dialogue."
"There was zero spent in this country treating chronic disease when my uncle [John F. Kennedy] was president. Today it's $1.8 trillion. It is bankrupting our nation. 74% of American kids cannot qualify for military service. How are we going to maintain our global leadership with such a sick population?"
"We have all these autoimmune diseases, exotic diseases that I never heard of: juvenile diabetes, rheumatoid arthritis, lupus, Crohn's disease, and a hundred others. That was just unknown when I was a kid."

You can hear what he said in the video below.

Some quick notes:

  • Tourette Syndrome, a disorder characterized by involuntary movements and vocalizations, was first formally described by Georges Gilles de la Tourette in 1885
  • While ADHD was not formally recognized as a mental disorder until the 1960s—Kennedy was born in 1954—the symptoms of ADHD were first described in 1798, and British pediatrician Sir George Frederic Still later unveiled a more comprehensive study of the condition in 1902
  • Although more extensive narcolepsy research was not undertaken until the 1970s, the condition was first described in the late 19th century in Germany and France
  • Autism was first formally described by Leo Kanner in 1943, though the earliest research that focused on children who would today be considered autistic was conducted by Grunya Sukhareva starting in the 1920s.

People were quick to point out just how wrong Kennedy actually is.


We've experienced quite a week of bizarre health claims from the Health Secretary.

Kennedy baffled even Fox News host Jesse Watters after claiming that testosterone levels and sperm count in teen boys are lower than the levels seen in 68-year-old men—weird to hear considering Kennedy, who is 71, should know that as men age, it’s natural for testosterone levels and muscle mass to slowly decline.

Earlier, Gwen Walz, the wife of Minnesota Governor Tim Walz, criticized Kennedy for describing autism as an “individual tragedy" in remarks to reporters. Mrs. Walz, whose son Gus has ADHD, a nonverbal learning disorder, and an anxiety disorder, called Kennedy's remarks "deeply upsetting, especially coming from our nation’s highest-ranking health official."

Kennedy's remarks came as he moved to have the The National Institutes of Health (NIH) gather private medical records from various federal and commercial databases to study autism more comprehensively. In a development that has many advocates concerned and outraged, a new national disease registry is being launched to track Americans diagnosed with autism, and it will be integrated into this broader data collection effort.

More from News/political-news

Emoji options while texting
Philip Dulian/picture alliance/Getty Images

Apple Just Revealed Its New iPhone Emojis—And People Have Thoughts

Let's be honest: Most of us have a little computer riding around in our pocket or purse that we refer to much more often than we might like. There's a good chance you're reading this on one of those devices, too!

And as consumers of mobile phone technology, we all have wants and desires for how these devices could be better, and once again, it seems like the production companies are just not listening.

Keep ReadingShow less
'Doomsday' fish in Cabo San Lucas
@accuweather/X

Two 'Doomsday Fish' Just Washed Up On A Beach In Mexico—And Everyone's Saying The Same Thing

Okay, this is probably fine! Nobody panic! IT'S PROBABLY FINE. *sobs*

Two so-called "doomsday" fish, the mysterious deep-sea oarfish, beached themselves at the same time in Cabo San Lucas, Mexico, last month in what has come to be regarded as a warning and bad omen for millennia.

Keep ReadingShow less
screenshot of Trump voter Richard Stanley
MSNow

Broke Trump Voter Dragged After Admitting He Misses 'Uncle Joe' Biden As Gas Prices Surge

After MAGA Republican President Donald Trump decided to join Israel in attacking the sovereign nation of Iran, gas prices in the United States have jumped, with some parts of the country seeing prices over $4 or even $5 at the pumps.

MS NOW spoke to a man filling up his diesel pickup truck at a gas station in Lantana, Florida. Construction worker Richard Stanley identified himself as a Trump voter, then expressed regret over his choice.

Keep ReadingShow less
Screenshots of Donald Trump and Shawn McCreesh

Reporter Goes Viral For Bluntly Calling Trump Out To His Face For Suggesting Iran Bombed Girls School

New York Times reporter Shawn McCreesh has gone viral after bluntly calling out President Donald Trump for suggesting that Iran somehow got a hold of Tomahawk missiles to bomb a girls' school in its own country on the first day of the war.

White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt was criticized last week after she rejected reports that the U.S. struck a girls' elementary school in Iran, killing 175 people, insisting in remarks to the press pool that it's just Iranian "propaganda" that they've "fallen" for.

Keep ReadingShow less
Alysa Liu
Marc Piasecki/WireImage/Getty Images

Alysa Liu Reveals That We've All Been Pronouncing Her Name Wrong—And Fans Are Stunned

It's always jarring when you see someone in the spotlight for years, only to realize that the way you've pronounced their name has been wrong. Take Taylor Lautner, for example!

Now the same is true for Olympic figure skater Alysa Liu, whose name has been interpreted with a variety of pronunciations since she started skating professionally, with the most common being "ah-leash-ah" followed by "lou."

Keep ReadingShow less