sa国际传媒官网网页入口

TalkoftheTown: RFK jr.'s appointment would endanger the future of public health

Published Modified

Robert F. Kennedy Jr. should be rejected as HHS secretary

My father鈥檚 life expectancy when he was born in 1901 was almost 50 years. My grandson鈥檚 life expectancy when he was born in 1999 was almost 80 years.

Much of this 30-year gain over a century is due to vaccines, which multiplied in the 1960s while I was in medical training. Serious infections like polio, diphtheria, tetanus, measles, and mumps became much less frequent. The danger now is that vaccines have been so successful that many deadly diseases aren鈥檛 on most people鈥檚 radar.

There are some signs of backsliding.

Measles is highly contagious and can be fatal for small children. Once thought to be eliminated, it鈥檚 now on the rise, with 16 worrisome U.S. outbreaks last year alone. Mumps is also making a comeback, with annual U.S. cases now sometimes as high as 6,000. The CDC reports that whooping cough is up five-fold, to over 30,000 cases a year.

Robert F. Kennedy Jr., a man with a famous family but sad personal history, including heroin addiction, has been proposed as the new secretary of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. He has no administrative experience, let alone medical or public health training. Despite recent backpedaling, his long-standing misinformed prejudices against vaccines are matters of public record.

His ideas are contrary to science, common sense, and public opinion, which all overwhelmingly favor continuing routine vaccinations. Please contact your senators and urge them to reject his candidacy in favor of someone more appropriate. Your and your family鈥檚 health, and perhaps even lives, are at stake.

JEROME WALKER

Las Cruces

I鈥檓 trying to buy a concert ticket, not an ocean liner

Hearing on the radio that the great jazz pianist and singer Diana Krall was playing at sa国际传媒官网网页入口鈥檚 Kiva Auditorium, I resolved to buy a ticket. So, I opened my computer. This ended up being my big mistake.

I went to what I thought was the Kiva Auditorium website, found the concert, and clicked 鈥淏uy Tickets.鈥 Unfortunately, I was switched to one of the third-party vendors, . I noticed the price of the tickets seemed to have gone up, but I soldiered on. I did not read the 鈥渢erms and conditions.鈥 Has anyone, ever? Besides, I was just buying a concert ticket, not an ocean liner.

After the purchase, I read that I am supposed to bring my phone to the concert. Apparently, they email the ticket to your phone at the last minute for security reasons. But here鈥檚 the kicker: I am not set up to receive emails on my phone. After all, I鈥檓 an old fart, a late adapter, a caveman. So, this is a problem. How do I get my tickets?

I called them and suggested they email the ticket to my computer, and I would print it out, or mail me the ticket. These are all time-tested, practical, and inexpensive methods of distribution. They refused all three. Apparently, it鈥檚 their way or sit at home and pound sand.

I think we all know by now that the ticket 鈥渋ndustry鈥 skims off the top without adding any value. They make us poor users jump through unnecessary hoops in the name of security. It reminds me of the scalpers at Wrigley Field, except they were humans with faces. Now it鈥檚 鈥渆-scalpers.鈥

The venues have made a deal with the devil. To avoid the 鈥済reat鈥 expense of selling tickets, they sub it out. Of course, it鈥檚 the customers that lose out.

Next time, if there is one, I will drive to the venue and buy my tickets directly from them and cut out any middle people.

I bet they鈥檒l still charge a service charge.

MARC BONEM

Santa Fe