Thursday, February 28, 2008

Another Death Due To Being Gay






FORT LAUDERDALE - The shooting death of a gay teenage boy who was dressed in women's clothing is being investigated as a possible hate crime, while detectives try to determine whether he was targeted because of his sexual orientation.

Simmie Williams Jr., 17, was attacked on the 1000 block of Sistrunk Boulevard by two young men who wore dark clothing and might live in the neighborhood, police said. Williams, who was wearing a dress and was known in the area by his first name or as "Chris" or "Beyonce," was shot about 12:45 a.m. Friday and soon afterward died at Broward General Medical Center, police said.It's unclear what Williams was doing in the area, about four miles from his house, but police are investigating whether he was working as a prostitute, officials said.

Williams' mother said her son was openly gay, but she didn't know what he did when he went out at night, and she didn't know he wore women's clothes

"I gave him $2 for the bus and he never came back," said Denise King, who lived with her son west of Fort Lauderdale. "He was a quiet person, kept to himself. He had a lot of friends. He wasn't a troubled child. He was a happy person."

At the same time, being black, gay and dressing in women's clothing made Williams "a minority within a minority within a minority," said Grant Lynn Ford, dean of Sunshine Cathedral in Fort Lauderdale, a church that ministers to gays, lesbians and their families.

Sometimes people picked on Williams, but he knew how to brush it off, his mother said.

Williams had signed up Wednesday for Job Corps, a federal government program designed to teach students vocational skills. He planned to get his GED and then go to culinary school, his mother said.

"That's what he really wanted to do. That's all he talked about," said King. "He spent the whole day with me yesterday, played with his nephew and cooked dinner."

Then he left the house Thursday night to go to Sistrunk, where the family lived at one point, she said. A few hours later, he was dead.

"We're looking into the possibility of a hate crime. There were some words exchanged prior to the shooting," said Detective Katherine Collins, spokeswoman for Fort Lauderdale police. She would not elaborate on what was said before Williams was killed.

Any case where investigators or prosecutors determine that a victim was targeted based on race, color, ancestry, ethnicity, religion, sexual orientation, national origin, mental or physical disability or advanced age can be deemed a hate crime. The label adds extra time to criminal sentences, upon conviction.

The corner where Williams was found is a popular hang-out for transgender prostitutes, police and residents said.

Sharia Ranson said she has noticed them from her home in the Oak Park apartments at Sistrunk Boulevard and Northwest 10th Avenue, where she has lived for two years.

Wearing dresses and makeup, they often stood in groups of three to five, Ranson said.

However, they are usually older than Williams, police said.

"Most of the time you see adults," said Detective Brice Brittenum, Fort Lauderdale police liaison to the gay and lesbian community.

In January 2003, about a half mile from where Williams was shot, a transgender prostitute was killed in the 500 block of Northwest 21st Avenue.

Timothy Broadus, 21, who also went by "Cinnamon" and wore women's clothing and a blond wig, was shot several times by a driver he had approached, police said at the time.

The case remains unsolved.

Anyone with information on Williams' death is asked to call Detective Mark Breen at 954-828-5708 or Broward Crime Stoppers at 954-493-TIPS (8477).

Staff Writers Elizabeth Baier and Andrew Ba Tran contributed to this report.

Sofia Santana can be reached at svsantana@sun-sentinel.com or 954-356-4631.

Brian Haas can be reached at bhaas@sun-sentinel.com or 954-356-4597.

House of Manolo Blahnik Scholarship

On behalf of the House of Blahnik, I am extremely excited to announce Year II of the House Blahnik Scholarship Fund 08-09. Our mission is… “to positively affect the overall development, health and wellness of our members, the larger lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender communities of color and their allies; while providing nurturing safe spaces for self-expression and continued growth..” We are proud to forge a national agenda that includes the health and well-being of lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) people of color within the ballroom/house community. We are honored to advance our people through supporting individual aspirations, upholding education and promoting pride. We are glad to be pioneers in the ballroom community.

The House Blahnik Scholarship Fund is granted to LGBT individuals of color, who participate in Balls, and are enrolled in an accredited institution of higher learning and/or individuals who are graduating seniors who have been accepted to an accredited institution of higher learning.

ELIGIBILITY

African Americans, Asian Pacific Islanders, Hispanics and other racial/ethnic minority persons who participate in the “ballroom/house” community who are enrolled at an accredited college; graduate or professional/ technical school, or who are accepted to an accredited college, university or technical school.

Members of the House of Blahnik are not eligible to apply. Former ‘House of Blahnik’ Scholars are not eligible to apply.

AWARDS DESCRIPTION

The House of Blahnik will issue a one time award in the amount of $1,000 to $5,000 to each student selected.

APPLICATION DEALINE

Applications are due April 30, 2008. Recipients will be announced on or before June 1, 2008. Award checks will be sent directly to the school or institution of the award recipients by August 31, 2008.

HOW TO APPLY

The House of Blahnik is pleased to announce the online scholarship application processes for 2008-09. For scholarship applications and guidelines, please e-mail info@houseofblahnik.com or go to www.houseofblahnik.org.

Thursday, February 21, 2008

E. Lynn Harris Comes to Morehouse College

The Maroon Tiger Student Newspaper presents the fifth installment of its Tiger Talks Series. Best-selling author E. Lynn Harris will discuss his life, his career, and the controversial characters that have made him famous. He will also give a preview of his soon-to-be-released novel "Just Too Good To Be True." A book signing will take place immediately afterwards.

Time and Place Date: Monday, February 25, 2008
Time: 7:00pm - 9:00pm
Location: Sale Hall Chapel, Morehouse College
City/Town: Atlanta, GA

Wednesday, February 20, 2008

*NBJC Black History LGBT Profiles: Day 19*

NBJC Black History LGBT Profiles: Day 19

Craig Washington


*Craig Washington* is a writer and community organizer lovingly raised by Anna and Leon Washington in Queens, New York. He has been living in Atlanta since 1992. Currently, he serves as the Training Coordinator at Positive Impact, an agency which provides free individual and group counseling for people affected by HIV.

Throughout the nineties, he developed HIV prevention programs for Black communities and specifically Black gay men including The Deeper Love Project for Black gay and bisexual men at AID Atlanta. He was a Co-Chair for Second Sunday, a support organization for Black gay men. He has served as a Vice Chair of the Metro Atlanta HIV Health Services Planning Council and as a member of the Georgia Statewide HIV Prevention Planning Council.

During his membership at the HIV Health Council, he helped initiate the African American Outreach Initiative, a two day seminar for Black people living with HIV/AIDS. In 1996, he served as a co-convener for the Atlanta Black Church Week of Prayer for the Healing of AIDS. Mr. Washington is a long standing member of the Martin Luther King Jr March planning committee.

He is the co-founder of the Atlanta Bayard Rustin-Audre Lorde Breakfast. His essay "A Revolutionary Act" is included in the groundbreaking 2006 Agate anthology "Not In My Family: AIDS in the African American Community." He has written various articles and editorials for the Atlanta Journal Constitution, Arise, Atlanta Voice, the Black AIDS Institute, Clik Magazine, Southern Voice, Venus Magazine, and the Washington Blade. Mr. Washington has spoken at many universities, rallies, panel discussions, radio and TV forums. In 2007, he helped convene the trainings "Keeping Our Brothers In Mind: Black Gay Men, Mental Health and HIV" and "Keeping Our Sisters In Mind: Healing Strategies for African American Women" at Positive Impact.

He is the proud recipient of a 2007 ZAMI Audre Lorde scholarship and is currently pursuing a Master of Social Work degree at Georgia State University. In October 2007, he was received the Phill Wilson Advocacy Award from the Balm in Gilead, Inc. He has been HIV+ for 22 years. Craig can be reached at www.craigwerks.com.

Black Gay Legislator

Connecticut Lawmaker Comes Out
by 365Gay.com Newscenter Staff

Click here for reference.

Posted: February 20, 2008 - 8:00 am ET

(Danbury, Connecticut) Connecticut state Rep. Jason Bartlett has become the country's first openly gay African American state legislator.

The Danbury Democrat ended widespread speculation about his sexuality during an interview with the Danbury News Times.

"For me the decision came down to why not now," Bartlett told the paper. "To me this is about having a conversation with my larger family - the people of Greater Danbury who voted for me."

The 41-year old Bartlett was first elected to office two years ago.

"I've always considered my life private," he said. "But at the same time we are also living in a digital age and I'm in the public eye. People are always interested in you and your family."

Bartlett has owned and operated his own mortgage company for the past 13 years and has raised two sons, now adult men. Most recently he co-chaired the Hillary Clinton Connecticut Steering Committee.

In an interview with the National Black Justice Coalition following his announcement to the News Times Bartlett discussed coming out to his family.

" I remember coming home one day and asking both my parents to sit down and talk with me. I told them I was gay. Then I changed it to bisexual. Then I changed it back to gay," he told NBJC, the nation's largest organization for LGBT African Americans.

"It was a difficult talk because I didn't want to disappoint them. They were both very supportive. When I told my dad it was going to be in the paper the other day, he said, 'I love you. I've never cared what side of the fence you played on.'"

NBJC also asked which he identifies with more heavily: African American, gay or both equally.

"I do not give weigh more heavily to one aspect of my being than another. We are all complex composites of many different things. I have been politically more active on issues that affect the African American community and volunteered my time to support a number of black candidates for office.

"Going forward, I will give voice to issues that affect either constituency. What folks have to realize is that as an African American I represent a district that is 96% white."

Monday, February 18, 2008

Janet Receives NAACP Image Award

Read about the award here.....Janet Receives NAACP Image Award

Reverend Orange Transistions...

Reverend James Orange was a beloved leader with a big loving heart. When he called me "leader" I felt honored and just blessed to be in his presence. Through my involvement with the Martin Luther King March planning committee I witnessed his unwavering inclusion and advocacy for lgbtq/sgl people as well as all others marginalized. He embraced Darlene Hudson, Kirk Surgeon and myself as his openly lesbian and gay sister and brothers. He gave so much to the historical and the contemporary human rights movement. Please send your love, prayers and/or positive energy to his wonderful family. I will miss him tremendously. -Craig Washington

http://www.11alive.com/news/article_news.aspx?storyid= 111444

Reverend James Orange, a leader in the Civil Rights, Labor, and Anti-Poverty Movements for over four decades, died Saturday at Crawford Long Hospital. He was 65-years-old. According to the Georgia State University Library Web site, Orange was active in the civil rights movement throughout his youth, working to integrate schools and organize bus boycotts in Birmingham. Orange worked closely with Martin Luther King Jr. and was present when King was assassinated in 1968. Orange was involved with the Southern Christian Leadership Conference in the 1960s and '70s.

More recently, Orange has worked with a number of national and international civil rights organizations including the People's Agenda for Voter Empowerment where he worked on voter education and registration drives throughout Georgia.According to the SCLC, Orange was born in Birmingham, Alabama but lived much of his life in southwest Atlanta.Rev. Orange leaves to cherish his memory a loving wife, Cleo; five children, two grandchildren, and a host of relatives and friends in Atlanta and Alabama, the SCLC said.

Funeral arrangements are still pending.

A biography of Orange was provided by the SCLC:

THE REV. JAMES E. ORANGE, a native of Birmingham, Ala., who resided in southwest Atlanta for four decades while fighting the good fight for equality and social justice for all mankind, was a courageous rights activist whose 6'5" frame was first seen in 1963 with King and Abernathy during marches in Birmingham to help integrate facilities and transportation in Alabama, in particular, and the South, in general. More significantly, it was his 1965 activism in Selma and Perry Co., Ala., that not only almost caused his lynching upon residents protested the death of Jimmie Lee
Jackson, who died, at 26, of an Alabama state trooper's gunshots while attempting to get his relatives registered to vote, but which also best describes Orange's heroism that ultimately led to the infamous Selma to Montgomery march and the Voting Rights Act, legislation signed into law by President Johnson in Aug., 1965.

As a project coordinator with King and Abernathy at the Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC) from 1965-70, Rev. Orange later became a regional coordinator with AFL-CIO in Atlanta. He retired in 2005 after 35 years of tireless service within the southeast where he incorporated beliefs of nonviolence and a progressive society toward a more cohesive unity between national labor leaders and the "beloved community".

Rev. Orange, since 1995, was the founder-general coordinator of the M.L. King, Jr. March Committee-Africa/ African-American Renaissance Committee, Inc., an organization that not only coordinated the nation's most-watched and heavily-attended commemorative events honoring the life and legacy of Dr. King, but led in the efforts, with former Atlanta Mayor/former U.N. Ambassador Andy Young, to promote industry and general commerce between Atlanta and the nation with South Africa.

From www.11alive.com

Friday, February 15, 2008

In Search of a Black Gay Agenda

In search of a Black Gay Agenda
From marriage to health-care, priorities may differ from general gay rights groups

By RYAN LEE
Feb. 15, 2008
http://southernvoice.com/print.cfm?content_id=8134

When about 100 black gay and lesbian leaders gathered in Los Angeles last month for a first-of-its-kind presidential forum entitled “It’s a Black Thang: The Black LGBT Vote ’08,” the disconnect between the crowd and mainstream gay rights organizations was almost instantly obvious.

“Same-sex marriage, as far as I’m concerned, isn’t in the top five concerns for me as a black gay man,” said panelist Jeffery King, founder of In the Meantime, a Los Angeles group for black gay men. “And I believe that also speaks for a lot of other people as well.”

King’s comment drew applause from the audience and unanimous agreement from his fellow panelists. The consensus denunciation of what for years has been a top focus of gay rights organizations and the media illustrates the profound detachment many black gay Americans feel toward the so-called “gay agenda.”

Prior to the forum, the event’s organizer, black lesbian journalist and activist Jasmyne Cannick, rebuffed a request from members of the Human Rights Campaign who wanted to register voters and recruit black gay attendees to canvass black neighborhoods in favor of same-sex marriage.

“The folks leading the gay rights movement have traditionally never cared about anything other than that,” Cannick said. “They are nowhere to be found on bread-and-butter issues which same-gender loving people who happen to be minorities are often dealing with.”

But it’s a mistake to assume that black gay men and lesbians don’t support marriage equality, or that they are the only gay Americans who disagree with the major priorities of mainstream gay rights organizations, said H. Alexander Robinson, CEO of the gay National Black Justice coalition.

“You can find as many non-black gay folks who would not put marriage equality at the top of their list of priorities,” said Robinson, noting that NBJC formed in late 2003 primarily to respond to the increasingly hostile rhetoric coming from black ministers about same-sex marriage.

“What I hear from my folks is we didn’t choose it as a priority, no one asked us if this was our priority, so there is some resistance,” said Robinson, who added that millions of dollars have been spent fighting the “worthy cause” of legalizing same-sex marriage. “But there are many other issues that rise to the top of the list as things that need attention.”

NBJC has hosted numerous town hall meetings across the country to gauge the concerns of black gay men and lesbians, and is in the process of preparing “America’s Black LGBT Political Agenda.” An early draft of the agenda ranks improving access to health care and eliminating economic racial disparities as the top two objectives, followed by ending homophobia in black neighborhoods and institutions, and “realizing all civil rights as LGBT citizens.”

Ronald Moore agrees that class plays as much a factor as ethnicity in gay people feeling ambivalent about the issues on which gay rights organizations focus. But the former diversity manager for Hewlett Packard, who is now diversity and inclusion director for Kimberly-Clark, also knows that even financially successful African-Americans have a difficult time breaking into the country club culture of many gay rights groups.

“At some point, I’m always sort of reminded that I am on the outside,” said Moore, a longtime activist who is currently the political board chair for Georgia Equality. “When you’re willing to write checks, a lot of homes get open to you, but you’re rarely invited to these places without it being a fundraiser.”

The most urgent issues Moore would place at the top of a black gay agenda would be fighting racism within white gay organizations, and eliminating homophobia among black families.

“Coming out [as black gay men and lesbians] is the most potent weapon we have, but that’s still the hardest step to take,” Moore said. “We need more people of color to come out and we need more of the white GLBT organizations to understand we can’t and will not leave our blackness at the door.

“I’ve found that the mainstream gay organizations, unless they do the work, are coming from a majority white background,” Moore added. “I think there’s still a strong feeling of we’re all for diversity, as long as you’re just like us.”

The Human Rights Campaign, the nation’s largest gay rights group, recognizes that it has “a longstanding reputation of not being good on issues dealing with race and gender identity,” said Cuc Vu, chief diversity officer at HRC. Vu and HRC are currently collecting information and data on gay African-Americans as part of a potentially historic diversity initiative.

As gay rights groups have drawn much attention about anti-gay hate crimes like the killing of Matthew Shepard, Vu said she learned that some black gay folks continue to confront a “much more intimate and direct threat of violence.”

“The violence is directed to them by their own family members,” Vu said.

Other issues that black gay men and lesbians hope to incorporate into a more holistic agenda include fighting homelessness, boosting mental health resources and dismantling the social structures that place many young black men on the fast track to prison.

The AIDS epidemic — which was a catalyst for forming mainstream gay rights organizations — continues to be a top worry, and sometimes the sole focus, of many black gay groups; gay and bisexual African-American men outpace every other demographic category in HIV infections.

But gay health care activism must expand beyond AIDS, said Robinson of NBJC. Finding a cure for HIV/AIDS won’t rescue the many black gay HIV-positive men who don’t have health insurance, or the black lesbian who is battling diabetes, high blood pressure, or any of the numerous other afflictions that take a disproportionate toll on blacks.

Despite its rich history and reputation as a black gay mecca, Atlanta has yet to distinguish itself as a hotbed of black gay activism.

“I think there is still work to be done in Atlanta and other places … when it comes to political mobilization,” said Robinson, who noted metro Atlanta should have more than a single openly gay black elected official — Kecia Cunningham, a Decatur City commissioner. “We have a critical mass of individuals with the capacity and know-how to do this.”

Atlanta’s large and diverse black gay population sometimes makes it difficult or overwhelming to try to mobilize a large group of people, said Stephaun Clipper-Wallace, a black gay activist and organizer of a Feb. 23 forum entitled “Black Gay Consciousness in Atlanta.”

“People feel like people don’t care, there’s too much apathy in the community or there’s not enough people in the movement,” Clipper-Wallace said. “But even throughout the civil rights movement, it wasn’t everyone who was on board.”

Vu’s first exposure to HRC came during one of the group’s fundraising dinners in the 1990s. The room full of white faces inside black tuxedos made an unfavorable impression on Cuc, who avoided the organization for a decade before being asked to serve as HRC diversity chief last year. Cuc accepted the position because she wanted to “put my money where my mouth is,” while helping HRC examine its core mission.

“What we heard from African-Americans is that their sexual orientation is not their No. 1 identity, which is very powerful to understand as an LGBT organization,” Vu said. “What it means is our mission of equality must be broad and inclusive, and can’t be limited just to LGBT issues.”

HRC took a step into the non-gay political arena last September when Executive Director Joe Solmonese spoke at a Washington D.C. rally in support of the “Jena 6,” a group of black teens jailed for beating a white teenager after racist attacks. Many people applauded HRC’s involvement, although the group was criticized for veering into topics not directly related to gay equality, Vu said.

But some activists believe the tactics of groups like HRC sometimes overshadow their good intentions.
“I am so sick and tired of people talking at me and about me, and not talking to me, and I think that’s how a lot of people feel,” Cannick said. “They’re going to have to go to some uncomfortable places, and hear some uncomfortable things, but if this is what you want to do — move forward and make change — then this shouldn’t be too hard to do.”

Many mainstream gay groups have spoken convincingly of being more sensitive to the unique needs of black gay men and lesbians, but there’s little to show for it, Robinson said.

“I think there continues to be something of a disparity between the intentions and the actual implementation,” Robinson said. “We need to make sure the strategies or tactics that are used are not just window dressing.”

Monday, February 11, 2008

Scientists Find New HIV Receptor

By LAWRENCE K. ALTMAN

Published: February 11, 2008

SAN FRANCISCO — Government scientists have discovered a new way that H.I.V. attacks human cells, an advance that could provide fresh avenues for the development of additional therapies to stop AIDS, they reported on Sunday. The discovery is the identification of a new human receptor for H.I.V. The receptor helps guide the virus to the gut after it gains entry to the body, where it begins its relentless attack on the immune system.

The findings were reported online Sunday in the journal Nature Immunology by a team headed by Dr. Anthony S. Fauci, the director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases. For years, scientists have known that H.I.V. rapidly invades the lymph nodes and lymph tissues that are abundant throughout the gut, or intestines. The gut becomes the prime site for replication of H.I.V., and the virus then goes on to deplete the lymph tissue of the key CD4 H.I.V.-fighting immune cells. That situation occurs in all H.I.V.-infected individuals, whether they acquired the virus through sexual intercourse, blood transfusions, blood contamination of needles and syringes, or in passage through the birth canal or drinking breast milk. The findings appear to provide some, if not the main, answers to how and why that situation occurs.

Dr. Warner C. Greene, an AIDS expert and the director of the Gladstone Institute of Virology and Immunology here who was not involved in the research, said the findings were “an important advance in the field.” “They begin to shed light on the mysterious process on why the virus preferentially grows in the gut,” Dr. Greene said in an interview. Dr. Fauci, James Arthos, Claudia Cicala, Elena Martinelli and their colleagues showed that a molecule, integrin alpha-4 beta-7, which naturally directs immune cells to the gut, is also a receptor for H.I.V. A protein on the virus’s envelope, or outer shell, sticks to a molecule in the receptor that is linked specifically to the way CD4 cells home in on the gut, the researchers said.

Binding of the virus to the integrin alpha-4 beta 7 molecule stimulates activation of another molecule, LFA-1, which plays a crucial role in the spread of the virus from one cell to another. The actions ultimately lead to destruction of lymph tissue, particularly in the gut. Several other receptor sites for H.I.V. are known. The most important is the CD4 molecule on certain immune cells; the molecule’s role as an H.I.V. receptor was identified in 1984.

Two other important receptors, known as CCR5 and CXCR4, were identified in 1996. CCR5 is a normal component of human cells and acts as a doorway for the entry of H.I.V. People who lack it because of a genetic mutation rarely become infected even if they have been exposed to H.I.V. repeatedly.

“The work we did took nearly two years, and there’s little doubt that what we have found is a new receptor,” Dr. Fauci said in an interview after giving a lecture here, adding that “we certainly have to learn a lot more about it.” Scientists have sought to identify receptors because they offer targets for the development of new classes of drugs.

For example, last year the Food and Drug Administration approved for AIDS treatment a Pfizer drug, Selzentry or maraviroc, which works by blocking CCR5. Dr. Fauci said he hoped his team’s findings would encourage other scientists from different disciplines to explore new ways to attack H.I.V. A number of experimental drugs that block the integrin alpha-4 beta-7 receptor are being tested for the treatment of autoimmune disorders. Dr. Fauci said such drugs should also be studied for their potential benefit in AIDS treatment. Organization of new trials in the next year or so could test such drugs in animals and humans to determine their safety and effectiveness against H.I.V., Dr. Fauci said.

One candidate is a drug, Tysabri or natalizumab, that is marketed for treatment of multiple sclerosis, Dr. Fauci said. Biogen/Elan makes Tysabri. If trials for H.I.V. are successful, Dr. Fauci said, the drugs could be added to existing treatment regimens.

Researchers Develop New Attack on HIV

Science & Medicine | Researchers Develop Technique That Prevents HIV From Reproducing, Philadelphia Inquirer Reports
[Feb 11, 2008]

Researchers from the biotechnology company Virxsys and the University of Pennsylvania have developed a gene therapy technique that prevents HIV from reproducing, according to a study presented Wednesday at the 15th Conference on Retroviruses and Opportunistic Infections in Boston, the Philadelphia Inquirer reports.

For the study, the researchers removed CD4+ T cells from an HIV-positive person and inserted the cells into a gene that stops the virus from reproducing. The researchers then used a University of Pennsylvania patented technology to multiply the T cells one hundred-fold and put them back into the patient using a harmless version of HIV. The gene into which the researchers inserted the T cells prevents HIV from containing itself in a shell, making the virus unable to reproduce and form new HIV-infected cells. The study also found that HIV self-destructed when the gene was inserted back into the patient.

The study examined nine randomly chosen HIV-positive people and found that all nine had high HIV viral loads after undergoing the treatment but that most of the virus had mutated into harmless forms. A clinical trial among 54 HIV-positive people is ongoing to determine the safety of the technique, called VRX496, and the best dosages. None of the trial participants has experienced serious negative side effects, and many have suppressed HIV viral loads and increased their T cells.

The technique "raises hope" within the HIV vaccine research community that if a preventive vaccine is not developed, the technique could be used to control HIV among people already living with the virus, the Inquirer reports. Gary McGarrity, executive vice president for scientific affairs at Virxsys, said the "buzzword" in gene therapy research is "viral 'fitness'" and that VRX496 "diminishe[s] HIV fitness up to two years after treatment."

The possibility of the technique becoming an FDA-approved treatment is several years away, but Virxsys CEO Riku Rautsola estimated the potential cost for a one-time series of infusions would be $130,000, compared with the roughly $700,000 cost for lifetime treatment with antiretroviral drugs. Rautsola said the company hopes the treatment will become a "frontline therapy," adding that it "would clearly be better in terms of quality of life" for people living with HIV/AIDS (McCullough, Philadelphia Inquirer, 2/7).

Sunday, February 10, 2008

Suicide Outside of Elevator

Security cam footage of Paris Lane, who shoots himself outside an elevator after talking with a female friend in a Bronx Housing project.

Your thoughts??......


Monday, February 4, 2008

The Future of HIV/AIDS Funding

FYI....If you live in GA, use the info listed below to contact. If not, after you read this, click HERE.

******************************************************************

Dear Stephaun,


We have some hopeful news! The next incarnation of the President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR) has been drafted and is heading to committee on Thursday, February 7. This bill is phenomenal - but those who oppose it are already mobilizing forces to defeat it and roll back HIV/AIDS funding back to dangerously low levels. This is where we need your help.

The bill contains wonderful expansions and programs to PEPFAR, and we are grateful to Congressman Lantos, chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, who worked hard to create the best possible bill. Some of the most exciting elements of the bill include:


* continuing the progress towards treating the U.S. share of one-third of the people with HIV in developing countries
* ending the required abstinence-only-till-marriage earmark which has been shown to be unworkable
* training and support for hundreds of thousands of urgently needed new healthcare workers
* $50 billion over five years - the minimum funding increase needed to support the program, instead of the flat-funding proposed by outgoing President Bush
* more flexible support for needle exchange programs worldwide,
* an expansion of the program to include tuberculosis, malaria, nutrition, new protections for the rights of women and young people and microbicides, and
* a repeal of the shameful HIV immigration ban.
*

We need you to reach out to your Congressperson TODAY and tell them you support Chairman Lantos' version of the bill. Please take five minutes out of your day and help us safeguard the future of US HIV/AIDS programs.


Call Representative David Scott at (770) 210-5073 today!

What to say:

Hi, my name is _____ and I'm calling from _____. I would like to speak to your staffer who handles global HIV/AIDS and the reauthorization of PEPFAR. I wanted to get in touch in order to express my support for the bill that Chairman Lantos is offering. I fully support these programs and hope that Representative Scott does as well. We need to fulfill our commitment to the world and I am counting on Representative Scott's leadership on this issue. Thank you so much for you time and support for this bill.


Or you can email your Representative by clicking Here.


Please contact Representative Scott's office as soon as possible by any means you choose and then ask your fellow Georgians to do the same. Then please let me know how your interaction went!

We will keep you up to date as this battle in DC wages. Thank you for your time and commitment. You truly made a world of difference today!



Mary Peterson

Grassroots Coordinator

Global AIDS Alliance

1413 K St. NW 4th Floor

Washington, DC 20005

(202) 789-0432 ext. 212

mpeterson@globalaidsalliance.org



Help us "Pep up" PEPFAR! http://www.globalaidsalliance.org/page/s/pepuppepfar



"Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful, committed citizens can change the world, indeed it's the only thing that ever has."

- Margaret Mead

Barack Obama: Find Your Polling Place

Stephaun --

Tomorrow is Primary Day in Georgia, and I'm writing to you with an important reminder to vote and to make sure that your family, friends, and neighbors get out and vote too.

Use our online tool to find your polling location:

http://my.barackobama.com/GAlookup

When Michelle and I talked about my running for president, one of the core goals we both had for this campaign was to leave the political process better off than we found it.

You have challenged conventional thinking and built a grassroots movement for change that is sweeping this country.

I have no doubt that the election tomorrow will be close. It's vitally important that you vote and ensure that others who want change in this country vote too.

Our work here will have a lasting impact in Georgia for a long time to come.

I believe that this movement for change can do more than just win an election. Together, we can transform this country.

Find your polling location and vote tomorrow:

http://my.barackobama.com/GAlookup

Thank you for being part of this,

Barack

P.S. -- Here are a few details and rules that will help make the voting process run smoothly. Make sure to share these with your friends:

*

If you are in line or in the process of voting at 7:00 p.m., the polls must remain open until you have an opportunity to vote.
*

If you are registered to vote, but your name does not appear on the voter list or you do not have the required form of photo ID, you still have the right to vote by using a provisional ballot. If this happens to you, you should ask the poll worker for a provisional ballot.
*

If anyone challenges your right to vote, you have the right to vote by provisional ballot.


Find your polling place

Visit: GA.BarackObama.com | Email: Georgia@BarackObama.com