The Crowd
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B.W. Cook
There is not as much talk about AIDS these days.
The disease that seemed to primarily attack gays and intravenous drug
users is no longer front-page news. So-called mainstream society no
longer fears a scourge of AIDS ravaging the heartland.
In America we tend to prioritize diseases and their cures. We attach
numbers to the afflicted. What percentage of people in the country suffer
from heart disease? How many have cancer?
HIV and AIDS is quite far down the totem pole of percentages. This is a
good thing. It is also a bad thing.
It is a bad thing because money and media pays more attention to those
afflictions that have bigger numbers. Tell that to a mother who has a son
with HIV. Tell that to a woman whose child has been diagnosed with HIV
because some aspect of her life that she has unwittingly passed on. Tell
that to Magic Johnson. Money for research is everything to those
suffering with HIV and AIDS. Time, after all, is against them, until a
cure is found.
Recently in Costa Mesa, with the help of one very funny and very
passionate celebrity, Lily Tomlin, AIDS Services Foundation held a
benefit at the Orange County Performing Arts Center, raising $50,000.
Tomlin’s touring show, “The Search for Signs of Intelligent Life in the
Universe” made a stop at Segerstrom Hall with pre- and post-performance
receptions attracting some 400 supporters of the foundation.
“We were moved by her performance,” commented event chairman Don
Stratton. Following the 2 1/2 show, which touches every hot-button in our
present social framework, including the issue of HIV/AIDS, Tomlin joined
foundation guests in the Center Room of the Performing Arts Center and
remained until almost 1 a.m. talking with locals, signing autographs,
shaking hands.
“She is a very special person,” added Stratton, joining fellow donors and
supporters including his co-chairman Mike McCormack along with AIDS
Services Foundation President Al Roberts, executive director Dan Gleason,
Mitch Goldstone, Carl Berman, Dan Ketelaars, Garett Gruber and Anita May
Rosenstein.
Information has helped slow the spread of AIDS in the last decade. Safe
sex and talk about safe sex is a national curiosity.
Condoms, once never discussed let alone touted, are now a product as
common as aspirin. Moral, religious and political issues aside,
information concerning safe sex, and safe drug use (now there’s an
oxymoron if ever there was one), has altered the spread of HIV
considerably. At least this is true in the United States.
Elsewhere in the world, especially in Africa, Asia and parts of Central
and Latin America, HIV goes unchecked, with millions infected and
spreading the deadly virus. AIDS activists all over the United States,
including right here in Newport-Mesa, ask the question, “Do we care about
these invisible faces infected with the virus?”
The answer is a resounding yes. HIV/AIDS is a world problem, a human
crisis crossing all boundaries. Local people such as Bill Gillespie,
Roger Johnson, Rep. Chris Cox, Rick Silver, Kathryn Thompson, Dean Corey,
Bob Haskell and many more serve on the foundation advisory board to help
keep the money coming in for research and services, and to help keep the
media on the job of informing the public.
HIV/AIDS funding is not alone on that totem pole of scientific priority.
Alzheimer’s, Cystic Fibrosis, Parkinson’s, to name only a few, share in
the frustration that funding is limited by virtue of the numbers of
American’s afflicted. The truth is, our society must not prioritize
medical research. Unfortunately, the free market economy dictates what
drug companies will invest in possible cures.
In similar fashion, the government, based on legislated congressional
funding, will decide how much America will invest, via the National
Institutes of Health and other medical research centers, in various
research projects to cure disease.
Frankly, it is important that the public sector rallies for AIDS and
Parkinson’s and the rest. Without groups such as the AIDS Services
Foundation, and entertainers like Tomlin to draw the crowds attention to
the severity of the problem, things would be considerably worse.
But it’s not enough. We have the ability to cure HIV and eradicate it
from the planet. We have the ability to end the suffering from juvenile
diabetes, Alzheimer’s and Cystic Fibrosis. Scientists claim the cure for
Parkinson’s is close, but not yet in hand. Why? Because it’s not a
financial or scientific priority.
I ask, why not? What better course of action do we human beings have to
follow in our lifetime? And, what is the mark of a truly advanced,
civilized and democratic society if it is not caring for, saving the
lives of, and healing the illnesses of the people? There is nothing more
important. And while a free market economy many spin the wheels of
business and generate prosperity, it is apparently not sufficient to heal
the sick.
Socialized medicine is not the answer. Bureaucracy has never cured
anything. The answer lies in leadership on every level of our society to
foster the benevolent belief that life matters.
One life, two lives, a million lives matter. We have the brains. We have
the vision. And we have the money. So let’s spend it and find a cure for
AIDS and all the rest of the diseases.
Think about that this holiday season as you write checks for every
possible material object. Consider writing to your representative and
asking for Congress to spend more on health care. You might also find it
in yourself to help on a personal level, whether a donation to AIDS
Services touches your heart, or any other medical need.
It truly is the most important thing we can do in life for others, for
ourselves.
* B.W. COOK’S column appears every Thursday and Saturday.
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