
I'm excited to be back as a regular contributor to Black Voices as we commemorate both Black History Month and National Black HIV/AIDS Awareness Day, Sunday, February 7th. This is "Greater Than AIDS," a new monthly column that will run in conjunction with the national Greater Than AIDS movement. Our goal is inform Black people about activities that our community is already engaged in -- and to enlist your support in what we still need to accomplish -- to overcome HIV/AIDS and bring the epidemic to an end.
Black people have been greater than any challenge we have confronted in the past. We were greater than the Middle Passage. We were greater than slavery. We were greater than Reconstruction. We were greater than Jim Crow. And, we will be greater than AIDS as well.
Yet each year more than 56,000 Americans contract HIV -- almost half of whom are Black. Black people account for two-thirds of the infections that occur among women. Among youth, that number rises to 70 percent. Research conducted among young Black gay and bisexual men suggests that about half of them are HIV-positive. And the AIDS rate in our nation's capital is as high as that of many African countries. These are the challenges we face. These are the challenges we cannot afford to ignore.

We confront these issues at a unique time in Black American history. Slightly over one year ago, we celebrated the inauguration of Barack Obama, America's first Black president. In 2006, then-Senator Obama spoke about the power of Black people to come together to be greater than this disease. Presidential candidate Obama promised to focus on the country's HIV/AIDS epidemic, with a particular emphasis on reducing the disproportionate impact of HIV on communities of color.
And, over the past 12 months, much progress has been made. Last April, the White House and CDC launched "Act Against AIDS," the first national HIV/AIDS social-marketing effort the government has undertaken in 20 years. The Administration is also working to create the first-ever National HIV/AIDS Strategy, a road map that will help federal agencies and state health departments work more strategically and collaboratively to fight AIDS.
The President has also lifted the ban against syringe exchanges that replace injection-drug users' dirty needles, as well as laws barring people with HIV from traveling to our country. These changes bring the United States in line with global human rights and HIV policy standards, paving the way for the U.S. to host the International AIDS Conference in 2012 -- the first time in over 20 years. And this month, the President is scheduled to announce the members of the President's Advisory Commission on HIV/AIDS (PACHA), a key group that will help keep AIDS at the top of his agenda.

At the same time, however, our nation's economic crisis is forcing state and local governments to make hard choices about how they spend their dwindling financial resources. Funding is being cut to organizations that treat and support people with HIV and AIDS, and waiting lists for low-income people who need governmental subsidies for AIDS medications are lengthening.
As we mark another Black HIV/AIDS Awareness Day, I'm reminded that governments can only do so much. Each of us has the power to make a difference in response to AIDS – in our relationships, in our families, and in our communities. Today, Black people are educating themselves about HIV/AIDS, getting their annual or semi-annual HIV test, increasing their involvement in the movement to end the disease and seeking treatment if they need it. But we must not become complacent; for in our community, every day presents a new opportunity to respond to this disease, to protect ourselves, to challenge stigmas, and to embrace our brothers and sisters who are already living with the virus.
Black leaders and institutions are tuned in and are making AIDS part of their mission as never before. Among them are the new chairman of the National Newspaper Publishers Association, Danny Bakewell, Sr.; his predecessor, John B. Smith Sr., Hazel Trice Edney, NNPA's editor-in-chief; and Dorothy Lavelle, president of the NNPA Foundation -- all of whom I want to thank for their longstanding support on this issue.
Against this backdrop, we start this Greater Than AIDS conversation. I invite you to go to GreaterThan.org to learn the facts, listen to real talk from real people, and find out where you can get tested and how to become involved. While you're there, don't forget to share your comments. I look forward to hearing from you and exchanging thoughts on how we are greater than AIDS.
Phill Wilson is President and CEO of the Black AIDS Institute.

Comments: (27)
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By: Mrs. DMS on 2/08/2010 5:02PM
I agree to an extent, that the face of AIDS shouldn't just be a face of torture from the last days of the desease, but we as a people need to get real! There is still NO recognized cure for AIDS. There is treatment for HIV, many meds to take, but there is no recognized cure. I agree with another poster in that we are living in a time where sex can kill you! People can't be relied on to be honest. And yes, with a big chunk of the AA male population having sex with other men, for various reasons is, IMO the number one cause. A disease that had it's roots in the gay white male community is now killing Black women. Do we think that is because BW slept with those gay white men, no. It comes from a culture of us who so willingly participate in perverse sex and promicuity. You won't hear people speak of that, because oh, you're being too judgmental. If my health could be at stake, you darn right, I am going to be overly careful. People, AIDS is no joke and again, there is no cure, just treatments. Be real with one another, MEN especially. Rather than worry about being called gay, because you engage in the act anyway, be real with the women in your lives. When you have sex with someone, you have had sex with everyone else they have been with.
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By: cntseeme09 on 2/11/2010 1:30PM
Hard but its fair, Sad but its true. People its praying time. One false move determines your longevity for a lifetime.
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By: ADRIAN HARRIS OF SOUTH GEORGIA on 2/11/2010 11:26PM
HAIL!!! MASCULINE SALUTATION!!! TO YOU FATHER!!! YOU ARE ALWAYS HELPING US TO OVERCOME!!! WE CAN BE GREATER THAN ANYTHING THAT OPPRESSES MANKIND IF WERE STOP FAILING TO REMEBER THAT WE ARE VUNERABLE!!! WE CAN DIE!! WHY TAKE NEEDLESS CHANCES!!! BE SAFE AND SECURE AND INTELLIGENT AND EDUCATED AND HAVE CORRECT THOUGHTS AND BEHAVIOR TOWARDS OTHER HUMANS. THE ORIGINAL REFERENCE OF THE WORD "BLACK". THIS IS WHAT "BLACK" MEANS. WHY DO WE KEEP PRACTICING THE WHITE MANS' DEATH DEALING HABITS. WE IMITATE HIS EVERY HABIT AND LOOK WERE WE END UP?!!! WE ARE A MINORITY. WE CAN'T AFFORD TO DO EVERYTHING HE DOES AND HOPE WE LIVE OUT OF IT AS A RACE/PEOPLE/ETHNICITY. THERE'RE JUST SO MANY OF US TO DIE THEN WE'RE ALL DEAD IN AMERICA. WE HAVE TO RETURN TO SOME OF OUR OLD WAYS OF HAVING A RELATIONSHIP, NOT ALL THESE MULTIPLE SEX HABITS WE ADOPTED AND IMITATED FROM HIM DURING THE 50TH'S AND THE 60'S. THIS IS WHERE WE WENT WRONG. WE DID THE SAME THING WITH DRUGS AND EDUCATION AND RELIGION. WE IMITATED HIM. PRAY FOR OURSELVES AND ASK FOR HELP AND LET'S GET BACK TO SUNDAY SCHOOL. HEY, GOD'S GOING TO LOVE US ANYWAY SO IF WE ARE FIGHTING HIM WITH OUR BEHAVIOR WHO DO WE THINK WE ARE TO HIM?!! WE CAN'T WIN!!! LET'S GO BACK/BLACK TO THE FUTURE!!! LET'S KEEP WINNING!!! VICTORY SEPIA PEOPLE!!! WAY TO GO!!! BYE!!!!
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By: Mike on 2/12/2010 9:37AM
Aids a disease of gay white men?? I thought it originated in Africa from monkeys. Hmmm I wonder how it got passed into humans from monkeys?? I think the answer is as obvious as how aids got passed into women from men. Oh the horror.
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By: ADRIAN HARRIS OF SOUTH GEORGIA on 2/13/2010 1:52AM
HAIL!!! THE TRUTH IS YOU ALMIGHTY ONE!!!! THE MAKER OF THE SCIENTIST!!! YOUR INCENUATIONS THAT AFRICANS HAD SEX WITH MONKEYS AND PASSED THIS DISEASE ON TO MANKIND BY SEX IS SCIENTIFICALLY NONESCENCE. AS A "BIOLOGIST" I WILL TRY TO ENLIGHTEN YOU WITH THE LATEST FACTS ABOUT THE SEARCH FOR THE ORIGINS OF HIV/AIDS. FIRST, THE OBSERVATIONS WERE OF THE PRIMATES THEMSELVES. TRYING TO GET SOME LEAD ON HOW THEY THEMSELVES CONTRACTED A "BLOOD BORNE" DISEASE. THE SCIENTIST NOTICED ONE CONSISTENTCY IN THESE PRIMATES. THEY HUNTED FOR MEAT. YES, MONKEYS "LOVE MEAT" AND PREFER IT OVER ALL OTHER KINDS OF FOOD. THEY "HUNTED" AND "KILLED" THEIR "PRAY" FOR THEIR "FLESH", "EVEN OTHER MONKEYS". THEY ALSO HUNT IN GROUPS AND ARE COORDINATED BY A HEAD PRIMATE. OTHERWISE, THINGS GET "BLOODY" IN THE LOWER PRIMATE(MONKEY)WORLD. SECOND OBSERVATION, NATIVES AND/OR ABORIGINALS "RELISH MONKEY MEAT". OR MORE CLEARLY SAID, THEY HUNT AND KILL MONKEY(LOWER PRIMATE) MORE READLY FOR FOOD. "AFRICANS" GETTING "BLOODY" WITH THE MONKEY. TO GET "BLOODY" YOU HAVE TO "CUT FLESH", SOMETIMES GETTING CUT YOURSELF. LASTLY, SEXUAL TRANSMISSION OF "HIV" FROM ANIMAL TO ANIMAL THEN TO MAN HAS BEEN RULED AS "IMPOSSIBLE". I HEARD OF HUNTERS RIGHT HERE IN GEOGIA WHOSE FIRST RIGHT TO PASSAGE TO MANHOOD OF THE HUNT IS TO DRINK DEERBLOOD AFTER YOUR KILL. BUT BLOOD IS FULL OF ALL KIND OF DISEASES. BUT THE BLOOD. THAT IS EVERYWHERE. SO NOW YOU KNOW!!! WHAT WE WANT TO KNOW IS WHERE DOES HIV AND OTHER DISEASES LIKE THEM,CHICKEN POX ECT, REALLY COME FROM. WE DON'T BELIEVE THE ANIMALS THEMSELVES ARE FORMULATING THEM IN THIER OWN BLOODSTREAMS, THEN ARE SEXUALLY TRANSMITTING THEM. THIS TOTOALLY LUDICROUS BECAUSE MOUNTING EVIDENCE DO MORE THAN SUGGEST OTHERWISE. READ ON SEPIA PEOPLE!!! REAL SCIENCE TO THE RESCUE!!!! WE'RE HERE!!! JUST YOUR FRIENDLY "BLACK BIOLOGIST" HIPPING YOU UP!!!! REMEMBER, GOD'S GONNA LOVE YOU ANYWAY!!! BYE!!!
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By: William L. Robinson on 2/19/2010 9:03PM
We blacks need to stop mixing our blood, with other race, one race has the virus and we keep mixing with them. Stay in your race and culture and AIDS will disappear.
The thirst we have for other race is why we die in (sin) diseases.
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By: Stacy Cadogan on 2/15/2010 6:56PM
I think these pictures are best for this topic. I'm a nurse and I see many young people around my age (33) younger and older who looks just like me and these people in the pictures who carry the virus or have AIDS. That's scary huh. It was a wake up call to me after seeing so many of my patients that looks clean, but in reality they weren’t. So anyone who claims they know the looks then they are truly mistaken. I said all that to say this "don't let a certain look fool u that it ends up costing your life"
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