New surgeon general pick?
So is this the small-business RINO health plan?
That’s a few too many small businesses with devious plans to get rid of unwanted employees when they’re through with them. A small-business boss riding on a medical diagnosis? No. A small business with permanent full time employees needs basic healthcare and retirement plans that don’t risk the business for every little thing.

Dr. Nicole Saphier is President Donald Trump's new pick for U.S. surgeon general, so we're looking into what she's said on different health topics. ¶Saphier is a breast radiologist … director of breast imaging at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center-Monmouth and an associate professor at Weill Cornell Medical College, specializing in breast and oncologic imaging … shares posts to social media about gardening and keeping chickens.
It’s not an encouraging background. Nothing is special about “breast imaging” as such that the average adult male on the internet isn’t an expert about. Other than that, cancer is cancer, whatever part of the body it strikes. Something smacks of prudery, excessive appropriateness, and lack of certain critical resources at that small-town rural cancer clinic, and the chickensh++ doesn’t help.

Treat cancer, save lives, sure, but I'm gagging on the touchy-feeliness and obnoxiously assumed sensuality of it already.
She is the sister of Calley Means, an entrepreneur who is a close adviser to Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. She and her brother have been outspoken about Kennedy's focus on conquering chronic diseases and have championed his "Make America Healthy Again" platform. ¶Means' nomination never made it to a full Senate vote as she was unable to get key Republicans in the Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee to support her nomination. ¶Republican committee chairman Sen. Bill Cassidy, a physician from Louisiana, grilled Means over her lack of full-throated defense of vaccines during confirmation hearings.
And it’s time to get off the property already. That’s too many “sisters” of a very ill sort, and the vaccines get a vice call from a devil’s advocate in Congress. They’re hard at work turning doctor’s offices and hospitals into whorehouses and red-light districts with all their needles.