Last month, when Florida Surgeon General Scott Rivkees announced that he was stepping down, many asked the same obvious question: Florida has a surgeon general?
The answer, evidently, was yes, though Gov. Ron DeSantis apparently didn’t turn to the physician for guidance in the midst of a public health crisis: The Tampa Bay Times reported last month that the Republican governor did not have any one-on-one meetings with Florida’s top public health official at any time in 2021. DeSantis did, however, make plenty of time for appearances in conservative media.
Nevertheless, with Rivkees exiting the office, it fell to the GOP governor to choose a successor. As the South Florida Sun-Sentinel reported yesterday, DeSantis made a curious choice.
Gov. Ron DeSantis appointed a new state surgeon general Tuesday who has written essays questioning the safety of COVID-19 vaccines, the effectiveness of masks and favoring hydroxychloroquine, a drug touted by former President Donald Trump to treat the virus.
At a press conference at the state Capitol yesterday, Dr. Joseph Ladapo introduced himself, and told reporters, “Florida will completely reject fear.”
It was a curious message. While panic tends to result in poor judgment, fearing a deadly pandemic is entirely sensible. If fear — of illness, of hospitalization, of death, of harming others, etc. — leads people to take responsible precautions, then “completely” rejecting fear puts people at greater risk.
The trouble is, Ladapo doesn’t quite see it that way. On the contrary, Florida’s new public health leader, who’s taking office while Covid-19 continues to take a brutal toll on the state, has a record of writing op-ed after op-ed after op-ed after op-ed for The Wall Street Journal, questioning the value of vaccines and the efficacy of masks.
There was also, of course, a New York Daily News op-ed touting hydroxychloroquine.
Just as importantly, Ladapo has boasted about his support for the so-called “Great Barrington Declaration,” a highly controversial joint statement, released in October 2020, that endorsed protections for the elderly and those with compromised immune systems, while simultaneously arguing that the authorities should pursue “herd immunity” by allowing the deadly virus to spread untrammeled through the rest of the population.
When Donald Trump effectively stopped trying to deal with the pandemic last fall, White House officials said it was because he liked the policy indifference recommended by the “Great Barrington Declaration.”








