The MAHA Takeover Is Complete
- By Countdown
Casey Means, Trump’s surgeon-general nominee, has a lot in common with RFK Jr.
The nomination of Dr. Casey Means for U.S. Surgeon General represents a definitive “MAHA” (Make America Healthy Again) shift within federal health agencies. A Stanford-trained physician and author of the bestseller Good Energy, Means is a telegenic communicator who shares a deep ideological bond with Robert F. Kennedy Jr. Her rise signifies a pivot toward medical contrarianism, as she frequently critiques the traditional medical establishment for profiting from chronic disease rather than addressing root causes like metabolic dysfunction. However, her platform is a complex blend of common-sense wellness and controversial commercialism; notably, the article points out that Means, has used her influential platform to promote products like “mitochondrial health” gummies, algae-laden “energy bits,” and a collection of vitamins she refers to as her “immunity stack.”
Means’s philosophy offers a much-needed focus on the dangers of ultra-processed foods and high sugar consumption, yet it frequently trends into pseudoscience. She has questioned the childhood vaccine schedule on popular podcasts and criticized hormonal birth control as a “disrespect” to natural biological cycles. Alongside other public health skeptics like Jay Bhattacharya and Marty Makary, her nomination suggests a fundamental shift in how the government will approach institutional medical expertise. Ultimately, her tenure will be defined by which part of her philosophy she prioritizes: if she tackles childhood sugar intake and chronic disease, she could be a force for positive change; however, if she uses her “bully pulpit” to undermine vaccine confidence or plug unproven supplements, she risks becoming one of the most dangerous figures in the history of the position.



