Dillin Degnan

Displaced by vaccine mandates, Dillin lost his job working for the company he'd spent many years gaining the education and experience for. He felt firsthand the effects of what happens when good people become the collateral damage of good intentions. Dissuaded by the notion that "the needs of the many outweigh the needs of the few," Dillin stumbled upon Robert F. Kennedy Jr. and his unwavering advocacy for the needs of the few. Interested in Kennedy's presidential announcement, it wasn't until several of his siblings suddenly fell ill with chronic severe mental disorders, childhood leukemia (ALL) and even suicide, that he realized the heavily ignored chronic disease epidemic was the most important issue facing Americans. Shining through many volunteer efforts, Dillin eventually became the State Director of the Rhode Island campaign to get RFK Jr. elected President. After Kennedy's endorsement of Trump, he pushed on with the same vigor. Helping get Trump elected meant, even with the slightest chance, that Kennedy could become the secretary of HHS and help combat the chronic disease epidemic. After Trump's win, Dillin wanted to keep the spotlight on chronic disease, utilizing the momentum already built and bringing the fight to the local level. He founded the "Healthy Again Foundation" and launched its inaugural project, "Make the Ocean State Healthy Again" (MOSHA), not only to support individuals facing challenges similar to those his family endured but also for all the people he met along the way. Many of the top volunteers, phone bankers, door knockers, op-ed writers, signature collectors and banner wavers had incredibly touching personal stories of the hardships that they and their families had endured due to the failures of our government, corruption of our health agencies and the institutional proclivity toward allopathic medicine.

If nothing changes, nothing changes
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Community Organizer