Saturday, March 25, 2006

See One

Who can grasp the implications of these numbers from the UN report on AIDS dated December 2005?

570,000 Children died in 2005 from AIDS

4,900,000 estimated number of people newly infected in 2005 - that's 13,400 per day, 558 per hour, every hour 365 days of the year.

17.5 milion women living with HIV in 2005, up a million since 2003.

25 million have died from AIDS since 1981, making this the most destructive epidemic in all of mankind's recorded history.

It's not the millions we hear of, but one person that is the tragedy - my one teacher, my one nurse, my one father, my one sister, my one best friend - or me. Then we can put a human face on a faceless enemy, a hidden tyrant.

Once we see one tyrant, we can destroy that enemy.

Now is the time.

Thursday, March 16, 2006

Scarce resources

One of the popular reasons given for poor progress toward global issues like defeating AIDS in our generation is that resources are limited.

I respectfully suggest that resources are not limited.

Here are a couple of examples that tell me there is lots of money in the world.

#1 - Europeans spend $11B a year on ice cream. That's right, ice cream.

#2 - There is now a website where you find a phone number that enables you to leave a message for aliens - extraterrestrials. The call is routed through a transmitter and sent into space via a ten and a half foot dish in Connecticut - and people pay $3.99 per minute to talk to - well to E.T.

#3 - In Ontario, Canada, there is a farm for "orphans" that you can sponsor for $40 a month - but the orphans are donkeys. Yes - donkeys, and the entire budget for the farm is covered by sponsors who receive an info package on their chosen beast of burden - complete with photo. No word on whether sponsors receive a letter from their donkey from time to time. Guess there could be some trouble with the translation.

There really is no shortage of resources - and the vision for an AIDS-free world can be realized as we allocate our abundance to people and ideas worthy of our investment.

Research. education, hospice care, (human) orphan care - these are things that will satisfy so much more than an ice cream cone, an interplanetary phone call... or a donkey.

Time to reconsider.

Sunday, March 12, 2006

The big picture

We all resist being reduced to a number, but numbers do tell a story. Consider the following numbers...

40.3 million - people living with HIV in 2005.

2.3 million - Children under 15 living with AIDS today.

4.9 million - People contracted the AIDS virus in 2005.

3.1 million - People died in 2005 from AIDS.

So what is the story? Maybe it's time to rewrite the ending...

Saturday, March 11, 2006

Consider Namibia

Namibia

AIDS Status: 20-25% of adults and young adults infected; over 70,000 AIDS orphans

Geographic: 823,144 sq. miles
Arid and semi desert, driest African country south of the equator

Population: 1.8 million
73% of the people are Bantu
4.5% European descent (Afrikaner, German)

Economy: Mining diamonds, uranium, cattle ranching and fishing all important.

Average income: $2110 per year.

Unemployment: 30%

Politics: Won independance from South Africa in 1990.
Belongs to the British Commonwealth the same as Canada.

Sunday, March 05, 2006

2020:Vision for an AIDS-free world

There is a time in each generation when a grievous tyrant must be confronted and defeated. For tyranny knows no end - gives no quarter. It must be actively opposed, strategically confronted and ultimately defeated.

And all tyrants will be defeated. It is only a matter of time and resources - who will choose to stand against this tyrant?

The tyrant is AIDS and the question remains - will this generation choose to take a stand?