The Story
On May 2, 2026, Dr. Maurice Sholas, a pediatric rehabilitation medicine specialist (physiatrist) at Ochsner Health/Ochsner Children’s Hospital in New Orleans, Louisiana, went on a racially charged anti-White rant on Instagram.
He is board-certified in pediatric rehabilitation medicine and has been practicing for over 25 years; he was the first such specialist in Louisiana.
Sholas has a pattern of public posts and statements framing his advocacy around equity, opposing certain Louisiana legislation (often described in political contexts around voting, education, or “democracy”), and using language about pushing back against or disrupting systems he views as obstructive.
Many parents and commentators (especially those identifying as part of the “mayonnaise caucus”) have stated they would not trust him with their children’s care, arguing that a doctor who publicly expresses hostility toward an entire racial group cannot be expected to deliver impartial treatment.
Ochsner Health has been heavily criticized for employing him; calls for review, suspension, or termination are widespread, citing professional standards that expect physicians to avoid alienating patient populations.
Meanwhile, Sholas has responded in a video.
My Take
This is clearly a top-tier example of why Whites shouldn’t trust Negroes in the medical profession. The anti-White rhetoric, the threat and inflammatory stance towards White legislators and White people he serves as a physician, clearly show that this man is a danger to White people in need of medical care.
White patients (especially children) have every right to expect doctors to treat them with the greatest amount of professionalism and care. If a White doctor went on Instagram and called Negroes niggers or any other racial slur, that doctor would be out of a job and ostracized from the entire medical profession. So why is it any different in this case? I think we know why.










