In recent days
the Biden administration’s monkeypox response deputy coordinator, Dr. Demetre
Daskalakis, has been attacked by right-wing figures and media. The reason? His
thirst traps, his tattoos, and his sexuality.
The conservative
media outlet The Daily Caller specifically targeted Daskalakis
and his history of being open about being gay as well as being directly
involved on the front lines of health care.
What’s ensued
is a wave of homophobic attacks against Daskalakis.
The reporter
who wrote the Caller piece tweeted, “Meet Joe Biden's
monkeypox czar: a ‘progressive, radical gay' doctor who performs HIV screenings
in sex clubs and gives meningitis shots in drag. Now he's in the White House.”
He then
tweeted several pictures pulled from Daskalakis’s personal Instagram account,
writing, “Out of nearly 2,000 posts on Dr. Daskalakis' Instagram account, there
are hundreds (maybe over 1,000?) of him shirtless.”
For the most
part, the piece and the tweets have been called sensationalistic, with many
coming to the defense of Daskalakis as a doctor and official who knows how to
get the job done.
The picture
tweeted above was actually from our sibling publication Plus, which
covers HIV and health news. Daskalakis, who also leads the Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention's HIV/AIDS prevention program, was the cover star.
Trolls,
however, have targeted his tattoos shown on his personal Instagram page. Of the
many tattoos, Daskalakis has one with a pentacle.
That’s what
made others on social media lose it. A gay doctor posting thirst traps and
baring a pentacle tattoo? Many came to the conclusion that he’s a satanist.
“I am
certainly not a satanist,” Daskalakis tells The Advocate.
And why do
people think he is? “It's because I wear high-fashion harnesses by Zana Bayne,”
he cheekily replies.
The harness
has been making a splash in the fashion world for more than a year
now. Also, the pentagram (or really a pentacle, since it has a circle around
it) has been around for thousands of years, even predating Christianity. The
HIV prevention specialist has tattoos including other iconography, including a
more Christian-oriented one. Maybe it’s all about balance?
While his
shirtless, harness-wearing images on Instagram were available for public eyes
before, Daskalakis’s account is now set to private.
Daskalakis
said recently that he was chosen for the MPV response deputy coordinator role
to specifically work on outreach to the LGBTQ+ community. “My primary responsibility
is doing right by the LGBTQIA+ community and to make sure that there is a
higher level of coordination on all fronts moving in the right direction,” he
told The Advocate.
The main group
affected by the MPV outbreak has been gay, bisexual, and queer men and men who
have sex with men. There have been 21,504 total cases in the U.S., according to
the CDC.
Daskalakis, a
leading public health expert, has been director of the CDC’s Division of HIV
Prevention since 2020. He is widely known as an expert on health issues
affecting LGBTQ+ people. He previously oversaw the management of infectious
diseases for the New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene, one of
the largest such departments in the nation — including serving as incident
commander for the city’s COVID-19 response.
To learn more
about MPV, visit the CDC's
website here.
SOURCE: ADVOCATE
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