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JFK's Grandson Says RFK Jr. Visits Him in Dreams to Predict the Future

Ava HartAuthor
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Ava Hart's Hollywood 360

There’s a lot of family drama happening in the Kennedy political sphere these days, but Jack Schlossberg just added a surreal wrinkle to the mix: his cousin Robert F. Kennedy Jr. apparently shows up in his dreams to deliver winning predictions.

In a preview of an upcoming conversation with Politico’s Dasha Burns shared on Tuesday, June 16, the 33-year-old grandson of JFK revealed that RFK Jr. visited him in a recent dream with an encouraging message about his congressional campaign.“Good job, you’re gonna win,”dream-RFK allegedly told him. Schlossberg, who is running for Congress to represent New York’s 12th district, says the dream felt so real that it’s got people talking.“Everyone is freaked out about it up here,”he told Burns in the clip.

But this isn’t the first time Schlossberg’s subconscious has tapped into what he sees as his cousin’s mystical ability to forecast his future. He also had a dream where RFK Jr. assured him he’d pass the bar exam—which he did.“So it’s all good. He tells me the future,”Schlossberg said matter-of-factly, as if receiving supernatural political endorsements from a relative is just how the Kennedy family operates.

The irony here is thick. Schlossberg, the son of Caroline Kennedy and Edwin Schlossberg, has been openly critical of RFK Jr., who now serves as Secretary of Health and Human Services in President Donald Trump’s administration. On June 16, during an appearance on the podcast“Here’s the Scoop with Yasmin Vossoughian,”Schlossberg called out what he sees as RFK Jr.’s repackaged wellness talking points.“He repeats things that are common sense knowledge that we all know,”Schlossberg said, dismissing claims about junk food and organic eating as ideas everyone already understands.

Earlier this year, Schlossberg went further, vowing that if elected to Congress he would support investigating RFK Jr. for controversial decisions made at the Health and Human Services department. He questioned RFK Jr.’s claims about specific medications and autism, demanding transparency about who’s funding his positions—especially while ordinary Americans struggle financially.

So while dream-RFK might be a cheerleader for his cousin’s political future, real-world RFK Jr. and Schlossberg remain at odds over fundamental issues of science, public health, and how the Kennedy legacy should be defined. The last time they actually spoke, Schlossberg was about 16 years old. That was then. Now, at 33, he’s fighting RFK Jr.’s influence from the campaign trail—and apparently getting encouragement from the RFK Jr. who only exists when he’s asleep.

Ava Hart's Hollywood 360

About the Author

Ava Hart

Ava Hart is a contributor to LocalBeat, covering local news and community stories.

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