Surgeon General: Now Accepting Affiliate Links
The slow demolition of the public, one appointment at a time
There are jobs where vibe matters more than credentials, like being a brunch DJ, a fragrance “sommelier,” or the person on TikTok who insists you can reverse time by staring into the sun while chewing basil seeds. Surgeon General is not one of those jobs, or at least it is not supposed to be.
The Surgeon General is the government’s loudest megaphone for public health, a role that is literally described as the “Nation’s Doctor,” tasked with giving Americans the best scientific information available on how to improve their health. The office also comes with real operational authority over the U.S. Public Health Service Commissioned Corps, which is not a brand partnership program, even if recent nominees sometimes seem to treat it that way.
So, when Casey Means sits before the Senate for a confirmation hearing and, under questioning, admits she has chosen to keep her medical license inactive, it is not a petty technicality, it is the core of the story. Because if you are going to be the “Nation’s Doctor,” it is reasonable for the nation to ask whether you currently have the most basic, ordinary, unsexy credential of clinical medicine: an active license to practice it.
The public record from the Oregon Medical Board lists Casey Means’ MD license status as Inactive, with the inactive status effective January 1, 2026. In the hearing, Means said the license has been “voluntarily placed on inactive status” and told senators she did not plan to reactivate it because she would not be seeing patients in this role. Now, defenders will leap in with the classic move: it is not required, and therefore it does not matter. Newsweek has also noted that an active medical license is not a statutory requirement for the job.
But “not technically required” is the weakest possible standard for the most trusted public health communicator in the country, especially at a moment when trust is already cracked and the consequences of bad guidance are measured in hospitalizations, not hashtags. If the Surgeon General position is reduced to a symbolic influencer pulpit, then we should at least be honest that we are replacing institutional competence with personality-driven persuasion and calling it reform.
There is also a basic ethical optics problem that you do not need a medical degree to understand. You cannot credibly ask the public to trust official guidance as the product of professional standards, while modeling a relationship to professional standards that looks like, “I will keep the license inactive, but I will still be the doctor on the billboard.” That is not moral authority, it is branding.
If there is one topic where the Surgeon General should be boring, it is vaccines, because the job is not to be edgy, it is to make the safest choice the easiest choice, especially for parents making decisions in a fog of misinformation.
During the hearing, Means would not directly say she would encourage mothers to vaccinate their children, and when pressed about vaccines and autism she said, “science is never settled.” TPM reported that she refused to unequivocally say vaccines do not cause autism.
This is the rhetorical two-step that vaccine-skeptic politics has perfected, and it is as familiar as it is dangerous: praise vaccines in the abstract, then refuse the clear public-facing recommendation that actually protects communities, and finally sprinkle in a little doubt about settled questions so that every conspiracy account can clip it into a “See, even the Surgeon General nominee admits it” video.
Here is the part that makes this more than a Senate hearing parlor game. The World Health Organization’s vaccine safety experts reaffirmed in late 2025 that the available evidence shows no causal link between vaccines and autism, which is exactly the kind of simple, accurate message public health needs. At the same time, U.S. vaccine messaging has been whiplashed by political pressure, including controversy around CDC web language on vaccines and autism that drew sharp criticism and fact checking.
When you inject ambiguity into vaccine communication, you do not “start a conversation,” you create permission for fear to masquerade as caution, and fear is contagious in a way that measles still is. And yes, the children are the part that should haunt every adult in that hearing room.
Measles does not politely target the people who chose the risk, it targets the people who cannot choose at all. Infants are too young for the routine MMR dose, and pediatric guidance during outbreaks is basically a frantic reminder that babies rely on the immunity of everyone around them. That is what community protection actually means, and it is why the Surgeon General’s voice matters more than one family’s “personal research.”
It is not melodramatic to say that anti vaccine rhetoric is a public health hazard, because it is a hazard with a body count that shows up in pediatric wards, in oxygen tubing, and in parents who walk into an emergency room thinking they are being careful, only to learn that “careful” is not a substitute for protected.
Now layer in the money, because money always shows you what the speeches are trying to hide. The Associated Press reviewed Means’ public profile and found she promoted dozens of health and wellness products using affiliate-style marketing arrangements, and that she at times failed to consistently disclose that she could profit or otherwise benefit from the products she recommended, including promotions involving companies where she was an investor or adviser. AP also notes that FTC rules require clear disclosure of “material connections” when influencers endorse products.
STAT reported that her financial disclosures showed she made hundreds of thousands of dollars promoting supplements and other wellness products, raising obvious conflict-of-interest questions for someone nominated for a role that is supposed to give unbiased scientific information.
In other words, we are not talking about a stray honorarium from a decade ago, we are talking about a business model, and that business model is built on the same thing public health depends on; credibility. Means has reportedly pledged steps meant to address conflicts, including resigning from Levels if confirmed and ceasing promotional activity tied to her book and monetized platform, according to reporting on her ethics filings. Bloomberg also reported divestment commitments involving family holdings, including tobacco stocks.
Those steps may help on paper, but they do not erase the deeper issue, which is cultural, not clerical. The Surgeon General should not be someone whose recent professional life trained them to convert public anxiety into consumer conversion, because that is the wellness industry’s central trick. It sells the feeling of control, and it does so by keeping the customer slightly scared, slightly doubtful, and always one more purchase away from peace. Public health works in the opposite direction. It tries to make the safest option boring and ordinary, so that parents do not have to become amateur epidemiologists to keep their kids alive.
If this nomination were an isolated oddity, it would be laughable in the way a bad reality show is laughable. The problem is that it fits a pattern in the Trump administration’s health apparatus, where contrarian celebrity, grievance politics, and distrust of institutions are treated as qualifications.
Robert F. Kennedy Jr., now leading HHS, has faced sustained criticism for vaccine-related policy moves, and reporting has described how he broke promises made during his confirmation process regarding vaccine recommendations and research support. More recently, multiple states have challenged his actions in court over changes to childhood vaccine recommendations, which is not the kind of thing that happens when a health department is calmly following the evidence. Put bluntly, this is what it looks like when the federal health infrastructure is treated as a stage for ideological performance rather than a system built to keep people alive.
We can, and should, make fun of it, because it is absurd that the “Nation’s Doctor” audition is now something like, “Do you have a following, a book, and a conveniently foggy relationship with vaccine questions that allows every faction to hear what it wants.” But we also need to hold the grief in the same hand as the jokes, because the people harmed by this are not the senators trading barbs or the wealthy adults who can buy concierge medicine and private schools with strict vaccination requirements.
The people harmed are the kids in crowded classrooms, the babies too young for routine shots, the families without paid sick leave, and the immunocompromised neighbors who cannot afford a government that treats science like a vibes-based negotiation.
And if it feels, to many Americans, like a project that protects the powerful while exposing everyone else to preventable danger, that is because the incentives line up that way. When public systems are made to fail, the wealthy do not suffer first, they simply step over the wreckage and purchase safety, while everyone else is told to “do their own research” in the waiting room. That is not freedom, it is abandonment dressed up as empowerment.




With a new grandson, I’m especially aware of the growing measles risk, which is now global as influencers in other countries also falsely discredit vaccines and vaccines are less available (partly due to Trump’s evisceration of foreign aid).
Just the notion babies will become ill or worse because unqualified, self-promoting freaks are empowered and policy makers are indifferent to the lives of others, especially the vulnerable and innocent, enrages me.
Exactly, he, they, are not interested nor care about those ‘unfortunates’ the vulnerable. In fact the less of them the better. In researching if Social Security is abolished or spent/gone/disappears..equals 23 million less to worry about.
Is the point more clear now?
The Medicaid people too, now there’s a bunch to erase too.
When the coffers get a true tally…it’ll be even more clear…as if it’s not now..? D
David Brooks -almost under-his-breath -said Friday night on that PBS delight with Capehart said “it sure looks like it” .
The chaos -throwing out conventional while inserting convenient, coercive, conspicuous, conspiratorial…all the cons can cough up? It’s CASH being stolen by the best,most infamous liars ever!
Yup.
But it “will only be painful for a little while”…
Let me know….
See ya at the protest