Photo provided to the Miami Herald |
By Noël Gordon
Human Rights Campaign (HRC)
September 27, 2016
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Read more here: http://www.miamiherald.com/news/local/community/gay-south-florida/article104510976.html#storylink=cpy
Human Rights Campaign (HRC)
September 27, 2016
________________________________________________________________________________
Much has been written about the 2016 presidential election,
including the fact that young people like me are still deciding where to
throw our support. For me, there is no choice but Hillary Clinton. She
is the only candidate in this race with a plan to address one of the
most pressing issues on my mind and the minds of many other Americans,
especially those of color: HIV.
Last week, I traveled to
Hollywood to attend the 20th annual US Conference on AIDS. The stakes
there, as they are in this election, could not have been clearer. If
current trends continue, one in two black men who has sex with men (MSM)
will contract HIV in our lifetime. The rate for Latino MSM is one in
four. I shudder to think what the rate would be for young, transgender
women who are also disproportionately affected by HIV.
This
shouldn’t be happening in today’s America, where we’ve made great
strides in HIV prevention, treatment, and care. And yet, it is — largely
because of structural barriers including stigma, discrimination, and
poverty. The situation is especially dire in the state of Florida, which
is home to at least five of the top 20 cities with the highest rates of
HIV transmission.
The conference occurred just two
months after I had an opportunity to join with a group of HIV and AIDS
activists to meet with Hillary Clinton to discuss how we move forward
together to create an AIDS-free generation. At the conference last week,
there was an undercurrent of unease about the upcoming election. While
Hillary Clinton sent a surrogate, Dr. Eric Goosby, to address the
thousands of attendees gathered, Donald Trump sent no one. Not
surprisingly, Trump’s chief campaign surrogate — running mate Mike Pence
— did not attend. He has a long history of standing against HIV and
AIDS prevention, treatment and research efforts.
Pence
vowed to oppose federal funding for HIV and AIDS prevention programs as a
member of Congress unless it was offset with cuts to programs that he
claimed “celebrate and encourage the types of behaviors that facilitate
the spreading of the HIV virus.” Pence instead wanted funding for
so-called “conversion therapy” programs that have been rejected by every mainstream medical and mental health organization as dangerous and not supported by science.
And
as governor of Indiana, Pence again put his hateful ideology first. A
new study published in the New England Journal of Medicine this year
highlighted how the HIV outbreak that occurred in on Mike Pence’s watch
in rural Indiana could have been prevented. The study noted that HIV
testing in Scott County, Indiana, was no longer available after a
Planned Parenthood Clinic was closed, and that Pence dragged his feet on needle exchange programs that are a proven form of prevention.
Trump’s
team has proposed no policy on HIV and AIDS. His policy staff
notoriously abandoned his campaign this summer after Trump refused to
pay them. What’s more troubling than Trump’s own lack of a formal policy
is that he put Mike Pence on the ticket.
Hillary
Clinton, by contrast, has offered the most robust LGBTQ equality agenda
of anyone who has run for president. Just this summer Clinton released a
detailed plan to fight the HIV and AIDS epidemic both in the U.S. and
abroad and to create an AIDS-free generation once and for all.
As president, she would increase access to Pre-Exposure Prophylaxis
(PrEP) and other HIV prevention methods, fight to remove barriers to
accessing care, protect the Ryan White HIV and AIDS program, and work to
end stigma and discrimination against people living with and affected
by HIV.
Last week’s 20th annual U.S. Conference on AIDS
in Hollywood was a reminder that all the gains the LGBTQ community has
fought for over the last eight years are on the line in November —
including the progress we have made on HIV and AIDS. Donald Trump and
Mike Pence could have taken the time at this event to develop and
release a plan of their own. They didn’t. That’s why “I’m with Her.”
Noël Gordon joined the Human Rights Campaign (HRC) in 2013, lives in Washington, D.C., and currently serves as senior program specialist for HIV Prevention and Health Equity. HRC, the nation’s largest LGBTQ political group, endorsed Hillary Clinton for president in January 2016.
Read more here: http://www.miamiherald.com/news/local/community/gay-south-florida/article104510976.html#storylink=cpy
Article orginally appeared in the Miami Herald
Read more here: http://www.miamiherald.com/news/local/community/gay-south-florida/article104510976.html#storylink=cpy
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