It doesn’t. “Monkey” is used in common racist language against black people. That’s the racist aspect.
“Monkeypox” also became associated with the LGBT+ community after the most recent breakout in the USA. And Americans love hating the gays almost as much as they love being racist. So, there are (at least) two negative stigmas associated with “Monkeypox.” They attempted to alleviate this by changing the name to Mpox. (It arguably didn’t help much.)
Some people are offended by the allusion to monkeys, because evolution is wrong. They label it as racist, but apes aren’t racist like white people are.
Mpox was monkeypox. They renamed it in an attempt to remove stigma.
What stigma?
https://www.npr.org/sections/goatsandsoda/2022/11/28/1139403803/who-renames-monkeypox-as-mpox-citing-racist-stigma
Thanks for the article. I’m confused as to how “monkey” relates to homosexuality or transsexuality, but I think I’m better off not knowing.
It doesn’t. “Monkey” is used in common racist language against black people. That’s the racist aspect.
“Monkeypox” also became associated with the LGBT+ community after the most recent breakout in the USA. And Americans love hating the gays almost as much as they love being racist. So, there are (at least) two negative stigmas associated with “Monkeypox.” They attempted to alleviate this by changing the name to Mpox. (It arguably didn’t help much.)
Some people are offended by the allusion to monkeys, because evolution is wrong. They label it as racist, but apes aren’t racist like white people are.
Of course. Is there anything we can’t taint?