At a recent United Nations meeting on chronic disease, Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. declared that the United States would not support a World Health Organization (WHO) declaration. He explained that the document goes far beyond legitimate health concerns, inserting pro-abortion language and radical gender ideology that threaten life, family, and national sovereignty.
Kennedy stated that the WHO draft “oversteps its proper role” by attempting to dictate domestic policy rather than focus on real health crises. He warned that the declaration was laced with political agendas—ranging from tax schemes to expanded power for international bodies—at the expense of protecting communities and respecting national constitutions.
“America will not stand behind documents that promote abortion as a so-called human right or force nations to accept gender ideology that undermines families and cultural values,” Kennedy stressed. He reaffirmed that the U.S. will never recognize any international or constitutional “right” to abortion.
In a public statement, Kennedy insisted that any global health policy must be guided by respect for national sovereignty, cultural diversity, and local decision-making—not by global bureaucrats pushing a radical social agenda. He further condemned the WHO’s handling of the COVID-19 pandemic, calling it a catastrophic failure that “cost the world valuable time and countless lives.” For the WHO to regain credibility, he said, it must undergo serious reform and abandon its political activism.
Kennedy emphasized that while the U.S. remains committed to global cooperation and the fight against chronic illness, it will not allow unelected international bodies to override the will of the American people. His stance highlights a clear defense of life, family, freedom, and national independence against the creeping influence of globalism.
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