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POVERTY OF THOUGHT

   "FREEDOM IS NOT ENOUGH"

 "You do not take a person who, for years, has been hobbled by chains and liberate him, bring him up to the starting line of a race and then say, 'you are free to compete with all the others,' and still justly believe you have been completely fair." President Lyndon Johnson "To Fulfill These Rights," Howard University, June 1965

Beyond the adult population, black teenagers are now incurring AIDS infection rates that are well out of proportion to their percentage of the population. According to the Center for Disease Control (CDC) black teenagers comprised the largest single group of young people affected by HIV. As of 2001, Black youth were 56 percent of all HIV infections ever reported among those aged 13 through 24. In 2003, black teens (ages 13 through 19) comprised 66 percent of AIDS cases in this age group, although they represented only 15 percent of the teenage population. White teens comprised 11 percent of AIDS cases and accounted for 63 percent of the teenage population.

The Garvey Corner    

AIDS PANDEMIC HAS EXPLODED RATES OF INFECTION ACROSS THE BLACK COMMUNITY.

 

EMERGING CRISIS

Single women are the heads of household in approximately 45 percent of African American households. Children raised in such homes are five times more likely to live in poverty. As much as they have been harangued for all of society ills, young black mothers are being threatened from a much more malicious source. Black women have now supplanted gay white men at the center of the HIV epidemic and it is being further reflected in exposure of their young teenage children who have accounted for over half of all HIV cases for the 13-24 age group ever reported. Ebony magazine has reported that AIDS was the number one killer of young black women in many major urban areas and among the three top causes of death for black women ages 35 to 44. Studies show that black women are no more promiscuous than white women to explain the fact that HIV rate for black women is approximately 20 times that of white women.


Black women are not more promiscuous than other groups of women, but they are the least likely to be married of all women because most live in communities where men are more scarce according to researchers. As black men cycle in and out of jail and prison, black women are torn from relationships and go on to have "more concurrent relationships," or more than one partner in communities where more people are infected, according to an article, " Social Context, Sexual Networks and Racial Disparities in Rates of Sexually Transmitted Infections," written by Adimora and Victor J. Schoenbach, an associate professor in UNC's school of medicine. "Incarceration directly affects sexual networks through disruption of existing partnerships," Adimora and Schoenbach wrote. Black men entering prison are placed in an environment with "a pool of individuals among whom . . . high risk sexual behaviors, HIV infection and other sexually transmitted infections are high."


The explosion of AIDS in the Black community has now been tied directly to the growth in the prison rates of Black men in the drug wars of the 1982-1996, during which the overall U.S. prison population doubled. In 1982, Black men accounted for 40 percent of the overall prison population. Black AIDS victims were 25% of the total US AIDS population. By 2002, Blacks were over 50% of the prison population which had doubled and over 50% of the AIDS population, even though we are 12% of the overall population. Wash. Post

Across the black population, which is 12 percent of the total U.S. population, our infection rates are approaching pandemic levels, easily over 50 percent of infected individuals across all demographics, age and sex. Personally, the loss of two sisters and a host of infected family and friends have already brought home the stark reality of the emerging crisis for the black family. While we scream at the funerals of those violently deceased, to which we have contributed a brother to Cypress Hills cemetery in NYC, building roadside commemorations to their thuggish life, and anguish over the unfair and long sentences of the drug wars, another brother donating 18 years of his youthful life in the federal penitentiary, there is a mere silence for the victims of the greatest threat to the black family since crack cocaine.

Marlon Charles

MAY 2006 

A Luta Continua.

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