Democratic presidential hopeful Robert F. Kennedy Jr. plunged into new depths of conspiracy theories when he claimed that Covid-19 had an “ethnic target” and that “the people most immune are Ashkenazi Jews and the Chinese”.
RFK Jr, 69, made the remarks at an event Thursday at Tony’s Di Napoli restaurant on New York City’s Upper East Side.
The late Robert F. Kennedy’s son drew the audience in with his bizarre tirades about vaccines, but the night turned into “a war of words and farts,” reports the New York Post.
The Post also reported on RFK Jr.’s anti-Semitic tirade. “We don’t know if it was deliberately targeted or not, but there are documents showing the differential and the racial or ethnic impact,” the Democratic candidate added.
He went on to opine that the powers that be are working on biological weapons that will leave Covid-19 a “walk in the park”.
Robert F. Kennedy Jr. pictured at the event on Thursday where he made bizarre claims about Covid-19 telling the audience that the virus was designed not to “hit Jews or Chinese.”

RFK Jr, 69, made the remarks at an event Thursday at Tony’s Di Napoli restaurant on New York City’s Upper East Side.

The event was hosted by writer Doug Dechert and was said to have descended into a night of “screaming and farting”.

Among Democrats polled in the recent poll, 58 percent support Biden for the nomination, while 15 percent back Kennedy.
“We know that the Chinese are spending hundreds of millions of dollars developing ethnic bioweapons and we are developing ethnic bioweapons. They’re collecting Russian DNA. They are collecting Chinese DNA so that we can identify people by race,” he continued.
There is no reputable evidence to suggest that anything RFK Jr said is accurate. Although there are new reports to suggest that Covid-19 was man-made and escaped from a laboratory in Wuhan, there is nothing to suggest that it was an ethnic target.
The event was organized by writer Doug Dechert. According the social chronicler david patrick colombia, Around 16 people attended the dinner, including someone from Amsterdam News, Page Six and radio host Rita Cosby.
Colombia wrote that a question and answer session began as soon as the first course ended.
“The guest of honor spoke about his thoughts on various topics and situations that he was asked about,” Colombia wrote.
Towards the end of the evening a heated argument ensued between the host, Doug Dechert, and art critic Anthony Haden-Guest. The reviewer called the host “a miserable drop” and told him to “shut up.”
The reviewer went on to call Dechert “insignificant” and “fucking crazy.” Videos posted on social media show Kennedy laughing during the war of words.
Eventually, the night turned into further farce, as Dechert could be heard farting as he announced, “I’m farting.”
RFK Jr adviser and right-wing activist Morton Klein told the Post he was “concerned” by the candidate’s latest comments.
‘This is crazy. It doesn’t make sense for them to do that. I read everything. She was totally against the vaccine. . . He wanted to convince me that it was okay not to take it. I’ve never seen anything like it,” Klein said.
Kennedy has dabbled in anti-Semitism with some of his other comments on the Covid-19 pandemic.
He has repeatedly invoked the Nazis and the Holocaust when talking about measures aimed at mitigating the spread of COVID-19, such as mask requirements and vaccine mandates.
He apologized for some of those comments, including suggesting that people in 2022 were worse off than Anne Frank.

Democratic presidential candidate Robert F. Kennedy Jr has vowed to impeach Dr. Anthony Fauci for his actions during the COVID-19 pandemic.
this week kennedy promised to prosecute Dr. Antonio Fauci for his actions during the COVID-19 pandemic in case i win White House in 2024.
“If there were crimes that he committed, of course, I would tell the attorney general to prosecute him, not delay him,” Kennedy promised during an interview on Fox News.
Although Kennedy did not directly state whether the former top United States physician is guilty of committing a crime, he said he believes Dr. Fauci caused “a lot of damage” by claiming he withheld treatments from Americans during the early stages of the pandemic.
Kennedy said it was Fauci’s actions that actually contributed to America’s high death count.
“I think he, in particular, by withholding early treatment from Americans, we racked up the highest death count in the world,” Kennedy said during the Monday night interview.
“We only have 4.2 percent of the world’s population, but we had 16 percent of the COVID deaths in this country and that was because of bad policies,” Kennedy explained.
“There are countries that did the opposite of what we did that provided ivermectin, hydroxychloroquine and other early treatments to their populations and had 1/200 of our death rate.
“There are many, many things that we did wrong in our country and some of them, I would say … some of the things that health officials did at the time, that they knew would be detrimental.”

Kennedy has made similar accusations in the past in a book titled “The Real Anthony Fauci, Bill Gates, Big Pharma, and the Global War on Democracy and Public Health.”
Kennedy was then asked by host Jesse Watters why he continues to promote the false claim that childhood vaccines are linked to autism.
“I think autism comes from vaccines, but I think most of the things people believe about my views on vaccines are wrong,” Kennedy said.
‘You know, everything I’ve said about vaccines should have good science. We should have the same type of evidence, placebo-controlled trials that we have for any other type of drug.
‘Vaccines are exempt from pre-licensing placebo-controlled trials. So there’s no way anyone can determine the risk of all those products or even the relative benefits of all those products before they’re mandated and we should have that kind of testing.’
Kennedy was not vigorously challenged by Watters during the interview, who appeared to accept the details he was touting.
The candidate is believed to be in the polls as high as 20 percent among some Democratic voters, though there has been no indication that President Joe Biden will engage in a debate with him or self-help guru Marianne Williamson.
Announcing his campaign in April, RFK Jr compared his campaign to the American Revolution.
“My mission for the next 18 months of this campaign and throughout my presidency will be to end the corrupt fusion of corporate and state power that now threatens to impose a new brand of corporate feudalism on our country,” Kennedy said.
The candidate was once best known as an environmental lawyer who worked on issues like clean water.

Kennedy launched his campaign at Boston’s Park Plaza Hotel on April 19 with his wife, Cheryl Hines, the Curb Your Enthusiasm actress.
But over the past nearly two decades, he has become one of the leading voices in the anti-vaccine movement. His work has been described by members of his own family and public health experts as deceptive and dangerous.
His efforts intensified after the pandemic and the development of the COVID-19 vaccine, and in 2021 he linked up with anti-democratic figures and other groups.
He has appeared at events promoting the lie that the 2020 presidential election was stolen and with people cheering or downplaying the insurrection at the US Capitol on January 6, 2021.
A photo posted on Instagram showed Kennedy backstage at a July 2021 Rewaken America event with former President Donald Trump’s ally Roger Stone, former national security adviser Michael Flynn and anti-vaccine speculator Charlene Bollinger. All three have promoted the lie about the theft of the 2020 election.
Kennedy has been a guest on Infowars, the channel run by conspiracy theorist Alex Jones, and on the ‘War Room’ podcast hosted by longtime Trump ally Steve Bannon, where he promoted his 2021 best-selling book, ‘ The Real Anthony Fauci’, in which he accused the top US infectious disease doctor of participating in ‘a historic coup against Western democracy’.
During the pandemic, RFK Jr’s group, Children’s Health Defense, gained funding and a following in the US and abroad, and doubled its revenue from 2019 to 2020. Revenue more than doubled, from $7 million in 2020 to $16 million in 2021.
Facebook and Instagram removed Children’s Health Defense accounts for spreading misinformation.