
Anthony Fauci’s wife, who once argued nurses refusing COVID-19 vaccines should be fired, just got a taste of her own medicine as RFK Jr. kicked her out of the NIH.
At a Glance
- Christine Grady, bioethicist and wife of Dr. Anthony Fauci, was removed from her NIH position under RFK Jr.’s leadership
- Grady previously advocated for firing nurses who refused COVID-19 vaccination, a stance now viewed as ironic given her own termination
- An NIH official described Grady as “a good person with a major conflict of interest” due to her marriage to Fauci
- The Fauci family’s net worth reportedly increased by over $7 million during the pandemic, now totaling over $11 million
- This termination is part of a larger NIH overhaul affecting at least 10,000 employees
Sweet, Sweet Irony Hits the Fauci Household
In a delicious twist of fate that has conservatives across America slow-clapping in approval, Christine Grady, wife of COVID-era hero-villain Dr. Anthony Fauci, has been shown the door at the National Institutes of Health. The bioethicist who once adamantly supported terminating healthcare workers who refused the COVID jab has now joined the unemployment line herself, courtesy of Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s sweeping reforms. The irony is thicker than the redactions in a FOIA request to the CDC, folks. Grady was reportedly offered a reassignment to regional offices of the Indian Health Service but declined, apparently preferring unemployment to relocation – a luxury those nurses she wanted fired never had.
“In the end, if people decide not to get vaccinated, that is their choice, even if they are a nurse – they may not be able to work in the facility that they’ve been working in, but they’ve made a choice.” said Christine Grady.
These words have aged like milk left in a hot car, haven’t they? Suddenly when it’s her career on the chopping block, the righteous indignation about “choices having consequences” is nowhere to be found. The termination comes as part of a massive restructuring at HHS, where Kennedy is shifting priorities away from the endless “pandemic preparedness” gravy train that made bureaucrats like the Faucis incredibly wealthy. Speaking of wealth, their net worth reportedly swelled by over $7 million during the pandemic to a comfortable $11+ million total. Nothing suspicious there!
The Husband-Wife Conflict Nobody Was Allowed to Mention
Perhaps the most telling revelation from this housecleaning is what insiders are finally comfortable saying out loud: Grady’s position at NIH while married to the nation’s highest-paid federal employee and COVID czar represented a glaring conflict of interest. An NIH official described her as “a good person with a major conflict of interest” – which is like saying someone is “a great driver except when they’re drunk.” The official noted that her marriage to Fauci restricted her ability to perform her duties effectively, particularly during critical ethical decisions around the pandemic response and the Wuhan lab leak investigation.
“a good person with a major conflict of interest.” stated an NIH official.
The same official pointed out that during the coverup of the Wuhan lab leak “they were not listening to anyone giving ethics advice.” Perhaps having the Chief of Bioethics married to the man steering the pandemic response wasn’t the best arrangement for unbiased ethical oversight? This conflict-of-interest elephant has been stomping around the room for years while mainstream media pretended not to notice, dismissing any concerns as “conspiracy theories.” Now that RFK Jr. is in charge, all those elephants are being escorted out of the building – along with their conflicts of interest.
A Larger Institutional Reset
Grady’s departure isn’t happening in isolation. The reforms have reportedly affected at least 10,000 employees, including Dr. Jeanne Marrazzo, who had taken over Fauci’s role as head of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases. This mass restructuring represents Kennedy’s commitment to fundamentally transforming how our health institutions operate, moving away from the pandemic-industrial complex that has dominated NIH funding and focus. After years of watching unelected bureaucrats with God complexes dictate public health policy while enriching themselves, Americans who value transparency and accountability are breathing a sigh of relief.
Despite some inevitable hiccups in such a massive overhaul – Kennedy recently acknowledged some employees were mistakenly terminated – the direction is clear. The NIH is being remade with fresh perspectives and without the incestuous relationships that characterized its pandemic response. For the first time in years, decisions about public health might actually be made based on science rather than politics, financial interests, and protecting reputations. And that, my friends, is a shot in the arm that America desperately needs – no boosters required.