Robert F. Kennedy Jr., the current Secretary of Health and Human Services, is making headlines again. But this time, it’s not for pushing more big government policies or championing the latest leftist cause. Instead, he’s headed to the hospital for rotator cuff surgery. Now, no one wishes pain on another person. But here’s the fact: while liberal elites like Kennedy can take time away for fancy medical procedures, regular hardworking Americans struggle just to get a checkup. This is the two-tiered society the Democrats built—with themselves on top.
It’s ironic, isn’t it? The same liberal establishment handing out lectures on “equitable health care” is loaded with leaders who jump ahead in line for the best treatments money can buy. The everyday American waits months for basic care under their bloated government health programs, while Kennedy is fast-tracked to the operating room. This is what happens when political elites are in charge—they rig the system for themselves.
Kennedy’s health issues might be newsworthy. But don’t let the headlines fool you. This is a man who claims to know what’s best for your health, your vaccines, your family’s lives. Yet, when his own wellbeing is at stake, he gets VIP treatment. The hypocrisy is glaring. It’s another sad reminder that Washington’s so-called “public servants” are too busy serving themselves to care about the real issues facing Main Street.
And let’s be clear, while Kennedy is out recovering, who’s making decisions at HHS? More unelected, untouched bureaucrats? These are the same globalist paper-pushers who’ve failed Americans for years. They’ve mismanaged health crises, pushed anti-freedom mandates, and treated our freedoms like privileges instead of rights. Now their boss is laid up, out of action. Should we be surprised if nothing gets better?
Here’s a thought: Maybe next time, a liberal leader needs surgery, they should have to wait just as long as the everyday citizen forced into the government’s health nightmare. Maybe then they’d finally understand that their socialist utopia is broken. Until then, it’s the same old story—rules for thee, but not for me.
Source: Washington Times
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