Seriously...it's a HUGE task...and almost a question that has no answer...but what can we do...as a group?? as individuals??? No one should be living like this...no child should be living like this. Annan: AIDS worse threat to life than Iraq war Tue Jan 14 2002 13:22:31 ET New York (dpa) - More people will die this year of AIDS than even in a war in Iraq, U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan said Tuesday, trying to put a more balanced perspective on the attention riveted on Iraq while dire global health problems go unattended. ``The worldwide AIDS epidemic will claim many more lives this year than even a war in Iraq would, and then will go on claiming more and more lives in 2004 and 2005,'' Annan told a news conference. He said famine is threatening at least 30 million lives in southern Africa and the Horn of Africa. Politically-troubled Zimbabwe, once a bread basket in southern Africa, is now at the heart of the famine situation in that region and is wracked by HIV/AIDS. ``This tragic situation (famine) is caused partly by the forces of nature, and partly by mismanagement,'' he said. ``But the challenge now is for all Zimbabweans to work together and with each other, and with the international community, to find solutions before it its too late.'' He said Africa is undermined by poverty, which condemns mothers and children to premature death. Other children go to bed hungry and without access to clean drinking water, he said. AIDS kills more than 3 million people a year around the world, with a majority of deaths taking place in Africa because of the high rates of infected people in that continent. On casualties in case of a war in Iraq, the World Health Organization has estimated that as many as 500,000 Iraqis would need immediate medical treatment for injuries as a direct result of the conflict.
Stop people from having unprotected sex with many anonymous partners. Then AIDS will diminish around the world...it won't go away, but it would stop spreading as the people with AIDS die off and don't give it to anyone else. Of course, nobody is going to stop people from having unprotected sex with many anonymous partners.
Well, if there were a lot of free condoms distributed all over the place, particularly Africa, and people knew how to use them, and there weren't all these bizarre superstitions about having sex with a virgin to get rid of the virus, and so on... maybe that would help too.
ok...AIDS is one part of the problem here...there are also kids with no clean water...families that don't eat...death from starvation...how can we let this go on?? seriously...what the hell would it take?? you want my tax money??...if it can solve this, you got it. i'd gladly pay more. i'd support any effort to rid african nations of warlords who steal away the aid we send...whatever. but it's time to commit to this...there is no reason people should be starving...and it drives me nuts because i feel like I should be doing something...i'm not doing anything...my kid eats well...he has parents who hug him and read him stories every night...this really bugs me. this topic and the partial birth abortion one are not ones i should be spending this much time on during a dreary cold day like today...
I doubt there's anything we could do. They have to change the way their culture, specifically how they veiw sex. That's the bottom line. Maybe we could distribute condoms, but then if that encourages promiscuity it may not be a good idea. Maybe economic reforms would help.
You bleeding heart conservative, you! Awareness is probably part of the battle... just keeping up with what's going on there. It's so tempting for most of us to just tacitly decide we don't want to hear about it. But if more and more people start caring, maybe they'll watch the TV news station that covers it instead of Michael Jackson hanging a baby from a hotel window, and et cetera, snowball effect, and it becomes an ISSUE. Maybe it's just not as cloudy on the left coast today.
I don't think we can do anything until we address the vampire situation: Not Your Usual Vampires, but Scary Nonetheless By RACHEL L. SWARNS BLANTYRE, Malawi, Jan. 10 — They wear dark clothing, it is said, and carry syringes to draw blood from their drugged victims, who sicken or die. The creatures have magical powers and a fondness for vanishing in graveyards, but no one has ever heard of them changing into bats. "I've never heard of them drinking blood, either," said Gospel Kuseliwa, 22, who says he and his friends recently chased some bloodsuckers while patrolling in Chiradzulu, a village just 12 miles from Blantyre. The men, who had never heard of Dracula, said drinking blood sounded like a pretty bad idea anyway, particularly in this era of AIDS. Malawi, despite the best efforts of its government, is in the grip of a form of hysteria. Vampires are attacking the villages, people say. Men are finally fighting back. At night, when darkness shrouds the green hills and women and children hide in their huts, the patrols creep slowly through the cornfields. Twelve brave men peer behind towering anthills and whispering trees with pickaxes, knives and clubs at the ready. Their prey, witnesses insist, are modern-day vampires: men carrying flashlights who disable their victims with sleeping gas. There have been no sightings here of caped men with sharp teeth. The persistent complaints about vampires have outraged government officials, who describe the reports as ludicrous and issue press releases and statements to make it absolutely clear to local citizens, potential tourists and the world at large that Malawi does not have a vampire problem. The repeated reassurances have not eased the deepening fears. Anxious crowds have already killed at least two people believed to be bloodsuckers. Several other people have been attacked, including three priests and the governor of Blantyre, who was stoned this month by a crowd of 200 people after a local chief accused him of harboring vampires in his home. Hoping to end the mounting hysteria, the police have arrested nearly 40 people and charged them with spreading lies and falsehoods. Seven more were charged with the attack on the governor. "We have asked those who have evidence to come forward and report to the police," said Paul Chifisi, the regional criminal investigations officer. "Some people have come forward. But when you ask, what are the injuries, what is the description of the suspect, they do not show any injuries or offer any description." In the frightened villages, the government's opinions are dismissed. The debate here is mostly about whether bloodsuckers are spirits or human beings with magical powers. No one questions whether vampires are real. They have smelled the acrid sleeping gas, people say. They have found abandoned syringes. Elesi Makwinja in Chiradzulu said she narrowly survived an attack and watched the vampires vanish into thin air with her own eyes. A woman in Thyolo died last month after a vampire removed her precious blood, her relatives say. "We don't know whether they are real people or spirits, but we know they are attacking," said Peter James, the brother of the middle-aged woman. "It's been happening almost every week," said Mr. James, who says the police refused to investigate his report. "We have seen them, but we haven't got close. They were wearing dark clothes and always walking fast. I heard the government's statement on the radio, but we know that this is happening to us." In these impoverished rural communities, which lack electricity, running water, adequate food, education and medical care, peasant farmers are accustomed to being battered by forces they cannot control or fully understand. The sun burns crops, leaving fields withered and families hungry. Rains drown chickens and wash away huts, leaving people homeless. Newborn babies die despite the wails of their mothers and the powerful prayers of village elders. People here believe in an invisible God, but also in malevolent forces — witches who change into hyenas, people who can destroy their enemies by harnessing floods. So the notion of vampires does not seem farfetched. Some people speculate that villagers are dizzy with hunger and imagining things. Others blame hungry thieves for creating the havoc. President Bakili Muluzi accused the opposition of stirring up the trouble to tarnish his administration. Then again, AIDS might be to blame. With so much shame and stigma surrounding the disease, some people might prefer to blame vampires for sickness and death. Charles Kaiya interrupts a visitor's musings over the various theories to suggest another possibility: the villagers might be right. He remembers another vampire scare in Malawi some 30 years ago. In the end, he says, police arrested a man with who was caught with syringes and bottles of blood in his refrigerator. Everyone knows that politicians lie, Mr. Kaiya said, which is why few people trust the government's position on vampires. Mr. Kaiya's theory? Perhaps the government has promised to sell Malawian blood to donor nations in exchange for financial aid. "Maybe it's going to Saudi Arabia to get money," he said.
ok..i've been made aware...but that alone isn't going to feed a starving kid tonight. i think for so long we've been so concerned about educating people to this problem that we've failed to do something. i honestly can't sit and do nothing on this deal...i don't know what i can do...or what it's in my power to do...but i can't do nothing. i've talked to my wife about adopting a child orphaned by AIDS...we're not at a point yet where we're ready to do that, but it's something. i suppose i could commit more financial resources to aid this year...but i don't feel like that's enough... i don't know...i'm really bothered by it. really bothered.
hilarious!! i already posted this in a thread earlier today...but your timing and placement was well worth seeing it again!
Condoms are for sailors is actually an Austin Powers quote from the first movie. So is the "random and unprotected sex with many anonymous partners."
Well, regime change would help. They don't have developed economies partly because of thuggish governments. Anybody who tries to set up a business has to pay bribes and grease payments. I worked for an oil company which had international locations, and I heard stories of how bad it was working in Nigeria. It was normal to get held up buy government soldiers. Set up the rule of law and free markets, and things could change. Asia is now prospering thanks to free markets.
Hey, we could declare war on Aids. Of course we would have to divert some of our tax dollars from being rebated to the rich and for starting wars all over. We could divert some of the money from the war on mar1juana and cocaine. Oh well, I guess we can't affford a war on aids, too.
Oops -- my bad. Actually, I do think the vampire story helps to illustrate the cultural differences we're dealing with when attempting to address the AIDS crisis in Africa. Since there is still a great deal of superstition and misinformation in regards to AIDS, I think education (of both men and women) is the first step in controlling the spread of the virus.
Oh the irony.... One side wants regime change (WAR!!) The other side wants to distribute condoms (Throw millions of tax dollars against a wall....surely a dollar or two will stick)
i'd be all for the diversion of money from the war on mar1juana... i don't think defending US interests and working to solve this problem are mutually exclusive, glynch.