The new book says Rfk Jr. admitted to doing the Psychedelic Drug DMT, said the brain worm was not a worm

Robert F. Kennedy Jr. he is a complex man of many colors – a man who says he cares deeply about the environment but also enjoys working for Donald Trump (a known fossil fuel forlover). He is a self-proclaimed romantic who likes to keep his road in his fridge and stop the whales from the ocean. He is also a person who happens to be married for a long time but who recently told – every letter from a disgraced journalist, he put it in an internal trial, where he put his opinion very much.
Yes, by now you’ve heard the drama surrounding Olivia Nuzzi, the former New York Journalist Political Journalist, and Kennedy, allegedly had a clean bill of health when Nuzzi covered his political campaign last year. Nuzzi was able to move what – for many other journalists – would have been a humiliating job into the book. His new tome, American Cantopartly because of his relationship with Kennedy. While it’s out there (coming next month), a selection of publications has just been previewed. The letter appears to convey admissions that Kennedy made to him privately, including that he had admitted to serious drug use and that the dead worm in his brain was not dangerous.
The drug claim appears in the New York Times, recently filed by Nuzzi, and his book. In the deposition, Nuzzi says that when they contacted each other, Kennedy agreed to do DMT, a psychedelic drug that can produce hallucinations. Paper notes:
He writes that despite his decades, Kennedy told him he still uses psychedelics, and smokes dimethylsryptamine, or DMT, a powerful drug with which people are known to feel near-death experiences. He told her that he “liked the liberators. I told him I took adderall.”
The DMT claim is somewhat similar and perhaps less surprising to Kennedy, given his interest in medical treatment. At the same time, it makes a certain amount of political sense. Bizarre as it may seem, the official call for Psychedelics has come from the political right in recent years. Conservatives wanted to shine a spotlight on legal drug use, and RFK was seen as a natural choice to further that machine. This summer, Kennedy was reportedly “exploding a government-run study” on psychedelics.
“These are people who desperately need some kind of treatment; nothing else works for them,” Kennedy said. “This line of medical rights is very beneficial if it is given in a clinical setting. And we are working hard to make sure that happens within 12 months.”
At another point inside American Canto, part of which was recently published by Vanity Fair (Nuzzi is now an editor there), it is alleged that Kennedy allegedly did not tell him that he did not actually have a worm in his brain. The worm in question was first reported by the New York Times last year. Journalists discovered that, in 2010, it consumed a large part of Rfk gray’s story and later he died. According to Nuzzi’s letter, however, Kennedy told him this was not the case. The passage, which has generated chortles across the Internet, reads:
I didn’t like to think about it later I would have liked to think about the worm in his brain that some people find funny. I loved his brain. I hate the idea of someone getting into it. Some thought he was mad; He wasn’t quite as crazy as they thought, but I liked the independent ways he was crazy. I loved that he was ignored in every way, as if he would swallow the whole world to know better if he could. He made me laugh, but I agreed when he made fun of the worm. “Baby, don’t worry,” she said. “It’s not a worm.” He relied on the doctor and reviewed the scans of the ice obtained by the New York Times, he said, and concluded that the shadowy figure may not be lonely at all. He sighed. It was too late to disrupt what was already moving from the realm of meme to the realm of scarf fiction, but at least I didn’t have to worry about a worm that wasn’t a worm in his brain.
So, yeah, wow. Indeed, some of the words of the caterpillar. Nuzzi has maintained that he and Kennedy have never had a physical relationship, and that the dalliance was not only the phone and the Internet (it has been called the “Affair Teair”). Kennedy, at the time, denied any relationship with him. Kennedy’s wife, who reportedly addressed Nuzzi’s claim that the two were having an affair and that Kennedy wanted her to have his child, told sources that Nuzizi was a liar.
A few days ago, Nuzzi was also accused of having an affair with a certain subject, Mark Sanford, a politician from South Carolina. That claim comes from her former Fiancé/political favorite Ryan Lizza, who wrote about it because of her independent exit. Gizmodo reached out to HHS for comment. We also reached out to meet him, the parent company of Vanity Fair.


