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Kai Chandler Lois Crenshaw Gary Paul Wright Fortunata Kasege Keith Green Lois Bates Greg Braxton Vanessa Austin Bernard Jackson

World AIDS Day Statement

November 30, 2007

Chicago, IL -- This World AIDS Day is a time to reflect on what this global crisis is costing us. It's a cost that's measured in generations lost, in cultures traumatized, and in societies that have grown more unstable as a result of this pandemic. And it's a cost that 33 million people worldwide bear each day as they struggle to live with this disease. And what makes all of this so heartbreaking is that it was -- in each and every case -- entirely preventable.

And yet, this is also a time to draw inspiration from the stories of heroism that are being lived each day. It's a time to draw hope from the extraordinary perseverance of those helping combat this disease around the world. And above all, it's a time to stay focused on the task ahead - stopping the spread of this disease once and for all.

That is what I will fight to do as President. As part of my comprehensive national HIV/AIDS strategy, we'll provide $50 billion by 2013 to fight the pandemic, and contribute our fair share to the Global Fund. I'll work to dispel the stigma surrounding this disease, which is what Michelle and I tried to do by taking a public HIV test in Kenya a while back. I'll expand the President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief by $1 billion a year in new money over the next five years so we can reach more people in places like Southeast Asia, India, and Eastern Europe, where the pandemic is growing. We'll make sure medications developed with taxpayer dollars are available as generics in developing countries -- because a person shouldn't be denied life-saving drugs just because we can't find a way to reform our patent laws. And we'll work to eliminate the extreme poverty that permits HIV/AIDS, tuberculosis, and malaria to flourish by doubling our foreign assistance from $25 billion per year to $50 billion per year by 2012.

But leadership on HIV/AIDS has to start at home. We recently learned that our nation's capital has the highest AIDS infection rate of any city in this country. That is an outrage. It's time to launch a national effort to stop this disease, starting with African Americans, who are being affected disproportionately.

We cannot give the boy back the parents he lost or the woman back the future she had dreamed of. But what we can do is prevent any more suffering. What's stopping us is not a lack of knowledge or resources, but a lack of will. And until we -- as Americans and as human beings -- summon the will to end this moral crisis, the conscience of our nation cannot rest.


This article was provided by Obama '08.


This article was provided by Obama for America.


Reader Comments:

Comment by: Robert Evans Tue., Jul. 22, 2008 at 8:59 pm EDT
I have had HIV since 1986, was a school psychologist in a middle school in Harlem from 1982 to 2006. At our school, we didn't have HIV education, despite the mandates, even though at the Schomburg Museum at a gathering with Cookie Johnson, I learned that HIV is growing in the black community, especially among females. I went to my school and gave them the name of a professor at NYU who gives HIV instruction around to NYC high schools.
On Dec. 1, it was my 58th birthday and World AIDS day, I was serious about the time about living some day with an HIV activist in CT named Brian, whose lover had died before he met me online and was once featured in The Body. That day, I went to the gay center in NYC and heard music from folks who had died of it, walked with a group to Union Square and remembered folks we knew who had died of it, then I went back to the Center to dance. I asked a black man to wish me happy birthday and World AIDS Day. He gave me a hug and told me he'd been POZ himself for 6 years, I told him I'd been that for 19 years myself. Every time I go there to dance, I see this man dancing, he watches me dance, but I don't know his name and he won't even give me his email address.
On New Year's Eve,I ran into my friend James and he hadn't had a drink for 18 years. I also called a man named Hugh, who lives in Oak Park,IL and was 62, a VietNam Vet, but Hugh called me back and said he found another man close by, but I sounded nice and he predicted I'd find love myself this year. Hugh said he had HIV, too, does a lot of volunteer work.
Around MLKing Jr's birthday I met a man online named Carlton, who is a social worker in a little town in MD. I learned later he also has HIV but is healthy. He and I have fallen in love, I hope to move to DC with him next year, be neighbors to President Obama and first lady Michelle, and work with minority kids again by next Dec. 1.
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