Rupert Murdoch’s conservative New York Post took a swipe at President-elect Donald Trump’s pick for the Department of Health and Human Services on Thursday night, joking that Mar-a-Lago must be seeing an outbreak of brain-eating worms.Robert F. Kennedy Jr. has said that in 2010, a worm got into his brain, “ate a portion of it and then died.” At the time, he said he was suffering from cognitive difficulties. Doctors found it was a parasitic infection: A pork tapeworm larva.The New York Post on Thursday night ripped Trump’s selection for HHS secretary, noting that the “overriding rule of medicine” is “First, do no harm” — and that appointing Kennedy to the role “breaks this rule.”The Post pointed to their sit-down interview last year in which he espoused a “head-scratching spaghetti of what we can only call warped conspiracy theories, and not just on vaccines.”ALSO READ: Why Trump voters should be held accountable for their choice”‘Neocons’ are responsible for America’s policy ills. ‘Pesticides, cellphones, ultrasound’ could be driving an upswing in Tourette syndrome and peanut allergies,” the Post recalled he said, adding: “He told us with full conviction that all America’s chronic health problems began in one year in the 1980s when a dozen bad things happened.”While social media users might be “gullible” and “hungry” for conspiracy theories, the Post came away thinking “he’s nuts on a lot of fronts.” People could be harmed or die, the publication warned. Furthermore, it warned Kennedy could send the industry into a disastrous “tailspin.””We fear the worm that he claims ate some of his brain some years ago is contagious and there’s been an outbreak at Mar-a-Lago,” the Post concluded.Kennedy has called vaccines into question, broadly questioning their safety and efficacy, including claiming, “There’s no vaccine that is safe and effective” — and promoting the debunked theory that vaccines cause autism.