Opinion: RFK Jr. allegedly ‘collected’ a dead raccoon’s penis. Was it bioethically justifiable?
Why this matters: health reporting relevant to everyday decisions and well-being.
During one of health secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s recent appearances on Capitol Hill, Rep. Adelita Grijalva (D-Ariz.) brought up an unusual allegation: that in 2001, he collected a dead raccoon’s penis. The incident was first described in the new book “RFK Jr.: The Fall and Rise” by Isabel Vincent, which quotes from a journal of Kennedy’s: “I was standing in front of my parked car on I-684 cutting the penis out of a road killed raccoon, thinking about how weird some of my family members have turned out to be.” According to Vincent, Kennedy cut off the penis “to study [it] later.” While Kennedy did not respond to Grijalva about the raccoon incident, focusing instead on the National Institutes of Health budget and DEI, it has been widely treated as sensational news. But the jokes about it obscure an important question: whether his described actions meet fundamental standards of bioethical judgment.Read the rest…