"More black Americans were living with the AIDS virus than the infected populations in Botswana, Ethiopia, Guyana, Haiti, Namibia, Rwanda or Vietnam - seven of the 15 countries that receive support from the administration's anti-AIDS program."
Of course, his AIDS aid was meant to fill Big Pharma's coffers, since the virus was created to kill them!!
Also see: Was AIDS Man-Made?
Alan Cantwell, MD On The ManMade Origin Of AIDS
Rev. Bob Wright has been vindicated, hasn't he?
"Black America would rank high on AIDS list; 16th worldwide if seen as nation, report says" by Lawrence K. Altman, New York Times News Service | July 30, 2008
If black America were a country, it would rank 16th in the world in the number of people living with the AIDS virus, the Black AIDS Institute, an advocacy group, reported yesterday.
The report, financed in part by the Ford Foundation and the Elton John AIDS Foundation, provides a startling new perspective on an epidemic that was first recognized in 1981.
That's a globalist, controlled-opposition agenda-pushing front, folks!
Type Ford Foundation into my blog search and read what comes up.
Nearly 600,000 blacks are living with HIV, the virus that causes AIDS, and up to 30,000 are becoming infected each year. When adjusted for age, their death rate is 2 1/2 times that of infected whites, the report said. Partly as a result, the hypothetical nation of black America would rank below 104 other countries in life expectancy.
Not that I'm against helping anyone stricken with this monstrous weapon of biological warfare; however, sort of an insult to blacks at home, no?
Those and other disparities are "staggering," said Dr. Kevin A. Fenton, who directs HIV prevention efforts at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the federal agency responsible for tracking the epidemic in the United States.
In a separate report yesterday, the United Nations painted a somewhat more optimistic picture of the worldwide AIDS epidemic, noting that fewer people are dying of the disease since its peak in the late 1990s and that more people are receiving antiretroviral drugs.
The gains are partly from the Bush administration's program to deliver drugs and preventive measures to people in countries highly affected by HIV.
More black Americans were living with the AIDS virus than the infected populations in Botswana, Ethiopia, Guyana, Haiti, Namibia, Rwanda or Vietnam - seven of the 15 countries that receive support from the administration's anti-AIDS program."
Is that a slap in the face to black Americans or what?
And about that glowing U.N. report:
"UN report shows world AIDS deaths drop; Life-extending drugs, fewer infections cited" by Will Dunham, Reuters | July 30, 2008
WASHINGTON - Global AIDS deaths numbered about 2 million in 2007, down from 2.1 million in 2006, UNAIDS said. AIDS deaths peaked in 2005 at 2.2 million after a steady climb since the disease was first identified in the early 1980s, UNAIDS said.
In 2007, about 33 million people were infected with human immunodeficiency virus, UNAIDS said. HIV is most often spread through sexual contact or injection drug use.
The total number of people living with HIV infections continues to inch higher as more people in hard-hit regions like sub-Saharan Africa, with two-thirds of all global cases, receive drugs that help them live longer, according to the report.
New HIV infection rates were basically the same in 2007 as in 2006 - about 2.7 million people, with a very small increase last year over the prior year, the agency said. The report cited a big increase in the number of people receiving AIDS drugs in low- and middle-income countries, numbering about 3 million. But many more still lack access.
"There are still five new infections for every two people who are newly added on treatment. So clearly, we're not pushing back the epidemic enough," Dr. Paul De Lay of UNAIDS said.
Rates of new infections are rising in many countries, including China, Indonesia, Kenya, Mozambique, Papua New Guinea, Russia, Ukraine, and Vietnam, and even rich nations such as Germany, Britain, and Australia.
UNAIDS said its report used data from 147 countries, but De Lay said he was disappointed the United States did not provide its 2007 AIDS figures because US officials continue to "refine" the numbers and will announce them soon. Last week, Congress passed a bill to triple spending on a program to fight AIDS, malaria, and tuberculosis in Africa and other parts of the world, with President Bush slated to sign it this week."He still hasn't signed it?
And how about TAKING CARE of OUR OWN BLACK PEOPLE HERE, huh?
What, no $$$ to be made?