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Heroes Among Us Print
Sunday, 04 March 2012 11:17

Excerpt: "In these times, when we are bombarded by a tsunami of spiteful, tit-for-tat infotainment ... it helps to remember there are heroes walking among us. Let's take a moment to recall that people really do care and often do something about it."

The AIDS Quilt on the National Mall in Washington DC, 1988. (photo: ActsOfHope)
The AIDS Quilt on the National Mall in Washington DC, 1988. (photo: ActsOfHope)


Heroes Among Us

Leslie Griffith, Reader Supported News

04 March 12


Reader Supported News | Perspective

 

inger Bette Midler loved San Francisco's Castro, and the men there loved her right back. When AIDS came to town, shattering the Castro and those in it to smithereens, it was a Bette Midler song that wouldn't stop playing in my head.

"Broken windows and empty hallways
A pale dead moon in a sky streaked with grey
Human kindness is overflowing
And, I think it's gonna rain today."

Walking through the Castro in the in the 1980s was a lot like walking through a movie set in the 1950s. Except, unlike a 1950s movie, most of the cute, well-kempt couples holding hands were men. Their faces invariably reflected a peace and gratitude. They came from all over the country and much of the world in hopes of finding a home free from judgment.

Then AIDS interrupted things. The Norman Rockwell painting began to blur.

Back then, no one knew what caused the disease or how to fight it or even what to call it. Nothing like it had ever been encountered before.

Crematoriums worked 24 hours a day ... the solemn smoke ever billowing from buildings. I remember reporting on a story of a local pilot hired to scatter the ashes of the dead. He was so overwhelmed he finally admitted in court that he threw urns full of ashes anywhere he could. Hundreds were found in his garage. He said he could not keep up. Others, in positions of power, were unwilling to even try.

Ralph Waldo Emerson once wrote: "The louder he spoke of honor, the faster we counted our spoons." That was certainly the case with our supposedly god-fearing president at the time. The more Ronald Reagan spoke of honor and virtue, the clearer it became he had very little of either. When it came to finding out what was killing San Francisco's gay men, Reagan's administration told Dr. Don Francis, then-assistant director of viral diseases at the Centers for Disease Control, to "Look pretty. And, do as little as possible."

Instead, Dr. Francis asked the CDC to transfer him to California to work on the front lines.

Randy Shilts can tell you the history better than most. As his friends fell silent around him, Shilts began writing a landmark book called "And, the Band Played On." It was later made into a stark and touching movie. Shilts was sick while writing the book, and later died of AIDS himself. But he managed to live long enough to show us how a handful of dedicated and heroic people can change history.

This handful of scientists, health professionals and physicians became medicine's version of The Untouchables - chasing the un-named disease like Elliot Ness pursued Al Capone. Unfortunately, they were often treated like India's version of The Untouchables.

Enter Dr. Marc Conant - detective-warrior extraordinaire.

Conant is a dermatologist by profession. Fearless by nature, Conant never expected to be on the front lines of the AIDS pandemic. But, that's where fate led him. He could not turn away.

In a world where Kim Kardashian's name is more recognized than Jonas Salk's, clearly it is time to remind ourselves what, in fact, defines a hero. One sure sign is risking one's own life in hopes of saving others. Another is giving up financial gain with that goal in mind. Jonas Salk gave his polio vaccine away. No money required. Giving it away was a slam-dunk no-brainer for him. That's a hero.

"Human kindness is overflowing
And, I think it's gonna rain today."

With a pandemic raging, Dr. Conant opened the largest private HIV clinic in San Francisco - the largest in the world. He treated five thousand patients, sometimes attending to hundreds during the day, and then gave briefings to Castro residents at night. He diagnosed the first case of Kaposi's sarcoma; a skin rash that meant the relentless march to death's door was about to begin. Marc Augustine Conant - "Mac," as his friends call him - refused to "Look pretty and do as little as possible."

Instead, Conant became the anti-Reagan.

He began warning the sick to secure health insurance, explaining that 'pre-existing condition' clauses allowed insurance companies to drop coverage and leave them abandoned, sick and eventually, homeless.

Many hospitals refused to take AIDS patients, with or without insurance. Not knowing how the death sentence was delivered, more than a few health professionals refused to care for them altogether. Many a lover ran away from the dying just when Dr. Conant and the others came rushing in.

When the group began to understand that unprotected sex was a pathway for the virus, Dr. Conant took the wildly unpopular position of encouraging San Francisco to close its famous bathhouses. He stood before a community that had dealt with homophobia all their lives and implored them to use condoms.

He fought the blood banks by trying to get them to test blood for signs of AIDS. At first they refused - it was "too expensive." Meanwhile, another twenty-four thousand people became infected. By the early '90s, it was not unusual for those living in the Castro to attend several funerals a day. With each funeral, Bette Midler's voice played louder in my head.

"Scarecrows dressed in the latest styles,
The frozen smiles to chase love away.
Human kindness is overflowing,
And, I think it's gonna rain today."

Don Francis, now a world-renowned epidemiologist and head of Global Solutions for Infectious Diseases, remembers what it was like working with Conant. "Marc got things done. His sheer will was amazing." Francis continues, "He's [Conant is] so insightful. He's a medical genius, so calm and so caring. He reassured those who got sick, and he was a dream to work with."

Dr. Conant served as an adviser on AIDS to then-Speaker of the California Assembly, Willie Brown. Francis remembers mad dashes to the state capitol.

"Often times we wrote what would become legislation while speeding down the road to Sacramento." Francis names San Francisco Mayor Art Agnos, Speaker Willie Brown, Congressman John Vasconcellos, and David Roberti, President Pro-Tem of the California Legislature, as some of the prime movers providing life-saving money the Feds refused to offer.

On March 21st, Marc Conant will be honored at the 16th Annual Public Health Heroes Awards in San Francisco. He will be introduced by his good friend, Dr. Don Francis. I hope Francis tells this story. He's given me permission to tell it here.

Shortly after "And, the Band Played On" was published, Dr. Conant and Dr. Francis received an "emergency" phone call from another scientist who did not fare quite so well in Randy Shilt's book. Francis took the call. After hanging up, Francis told Conant that the scientist accused him [Dr. Francis] of being Randy Shilt's secret lover.

Conant looked at Francis, then said, "That's ridiculous, Don ... do you see how you dress?!"

In these times, when we are bombarded by a tsunami of spiteful, tit-for-tat infotainment ... it helps to remember there are heroes walking among us. On March 21st, Dr. Marc Conant will walk into San Francisco's Nikko Hotel and get a much-deserved pat on the back. Let's take a moment to recall that people really do care and often do something about it.

 

"Heroes Among Us" performed by Bette Midler.


Leslie Griffith has been a television anchor, foreign correspondent and an investigative reporter in newspaper, radio and television for over 25 years. Among her many achievements are two Edward R Murrow Awards, nine Emmies, 37 Emmy Nominations, a National Emmy nomination for writing, and more than a dozen other awards for journalism. She is currently working on a documentary, giving speeches on "Reforming the Media," and writing for many on-line publications, as well as writing a book called "Shut Up and Read." She hopes the book, her speeches, and her articles on the media will help remind the nation that journalism was once about public service ... not profit. To contact Leslie, go to lesliegriffithproductions.com.

Reader Supported News is the Publication of Origin for this work. Permission to republish is freely granted with credit and a link back to Reader Supported News.

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Somebody Print
Sunday, 04 March 2012 10:56

Modine writes: "It's easy to bemoan our political leaders and we no doubt expect way too much from them. When they fail to represent the will of the people and the nation, we need to replace them and find those that will."

Actor Mathew Modine has produced a thought-provoking video about placing blame. (image: Matthew Modine)
Actor Mathew Modine has produced a thought-provoking video about placing blame. (image: Matthew Modine)



Somebody

Matthew Modine, Reader Supported News

04 March 12

 

 


t's easy to bemoan our political leaders and we no doubt expect way too much from them. They are, after all, no more than elected public officials. We vote them into office to represent us. When they fail to represent the will of the people and the nation, we need to replace them and find those that will. This democratic process is but one of the goals of the Occupy Wall Street (OWS) movement. OWS can now be found in 951 cities in 83 countries including Europe, North America, South America, Asia and Africa. OWS is a people-powered movement that began in the financial district of New York City and has grown into a global occupation. It's people from all over the world asking for better management. People asking this from their leaders and nations. People recognizing that governments commitment to the future is short-sighted. People exercising their right to demonstrate - which is the most basic emblem of democracy. Everybody is each of us. If you think you're too small to make an impact, remember how annoying it is to try and sleep with a mosquito in your bedroom. I made this film to demonstrate.

 

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IvQeiLvJrD0

 

This is a story about four people named Everybody, Somebody, Anybody, and Nobody. There was an important job to be done and Everybody was sure that Somebody would do it. Anybody could have done it, but Nobody did it. Somebody got angry about that because it was Everybody's job. Everybody thought that Anybody could do it, but Nobody realized that Everybody wouldn't do it. It ended up that Everybody blamed Somebody when Nobody did what Anybody could have done. The best way to create hope is to create opportunity.


Reader Supported News is the Publication of Origin for this work. Permission to republish is freely granted with credit and a link back to Reader Supported News.

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12 Republican Myths That Are Killing Us Print
Saturday, 03 March 2012 16:47

Grayson writes: "Evolution is not something that you 'believe' or 'disbelieve.' Evolution is like gravity; it's not like Santa Claus or the Abominable Snowman. Be that as it may, neither Jon Huntsman nor any other Republican presidential candidate has been willing to take on the hard myths. The myths that are killing us. Here are a dirty dozen, right off the top of my head."

Progressive political gadfly and former Representative Alan Grayson. (photo: Evan Vucci/AP)
Progressive political gadfly and former Representative Alan Grayson. (photo: Evan Vucci/AP)


12 Republican Myths That Are Killing Us

Alan Grayson, Reader Supported News

03 March 12

 

s the Republican demolition derby rolls on, I continue to be amused by how each remaining contender tries to assume the "small government" mantle.

Mitt Romney wants a government so small that it provides universal health care.

Newt Gingrich wants a government so small that it will establish a permanent base on the moon.

Rick Santorum wants a government so small that it will fit inside a woman's uterus.

The only real remaining advocate of small government is Ron Paul. Dr. Paul appears to be disqualified from the Republican presidential primary, however, because he is unwilling to drench himself with the blood of our imagined enemies, like Gerard Butler in the movie "300."

But what about that Jon Huntsman guy? This week three different people told me, quite independently of each other, how sorry they were that Governor Huntsman never gained any traction in the Republican presidential primary.

I told them that they should get over it. Huntsman wasn't any better.

It somehow counts as an act of courage for Huntsman to have tweeted: "I believe in evolution." Of course, it would have been more courageous if Huntsman had said that to a Tea Party audience, and then they tore him limb from limb, thereby disproving the theory of evolution right before our eyes.

And evolution is not something that you "believe" or "disbelieve." Evolution is like gravity; it's not like Santa Claus or the Abominable Snowman. (Question: Why do they both live at the North Pole?)

Be that as it may, neither Huntsman nor any other Republican presidential candidate has been willing to take on the hard myths. The myths that are killing us. Here are a dirty dozen, right off the top of my head:

  1. The government can't create jobs. (Tell that to FDR, who created four million jobs in three months.)

  2. Tax cuts reduce the deficit. (Doesn't it bother them that a man named "Laffer" came up with this one?)

  3. A fetus is a baby.

  4. The poor have too much money.

  5. Cutting the federal deficit will end the recession.

  6. The rich are incentivized by tax cuts, while the poor are incentivized by lower wages, no benefits, an end to the minimum wage, and unemployment.

  7. An unwanted child is God's will.

  8. Everyone who wants health insurance has it.

  9. The problem with education is the teachers.

  10. The "free market" satisfies every human need.

  11. There is no discrimination in America anymore.

  12. The distribution of wealth and income are irrelevant.

I don't remember Jon Huntsman disputing any of these myths. And these are the ones that do the real damage. Show me a candidate who is willing to take on these myths, and I'll pay more attention.

Courage,

Alan Grayson


Reader Supported News is the Publication of Origin for this work. Permission to republish is freely granted with credit and a link back to Reader Supported News.

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FOCUS: 5 Advertisers Drop Rush Limbaugh Over 'Slut' Firestorm Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=17019"><span class="small">Adam Peck, ThinkProgress </span></a>   
Saturday, 03 March 2012 12:26

Intro: "Rush Limbaugh's latest misogynistic tirade against Georgetown University Law Student Sandra Fluke may be the last straw for many of the shock jock's corporate sponsors."

Limbaugh is facing a growing firestorm fueled by social media after 'doubling-down' on his attack on Sandra Fluke. (photo: Ethan Miller/Getty Images)
Limbaugh is facing a growing firestorm fueled by social media after 'doubling-down' on his attack on Sandra Fluke. (photo: Ethan Miller/Getty Images)



5 Advertisers Drop Rush Limbaugh Over 'Slut' Firestorm

By Adam Peck, ThinkProgress

03 March 12

 

ush Limbaugh's latest misogynistic tirade against Georgetown University Law Student Sandra Fluke may be the last straw for many of the shock jock's corporate sponsors. Thousands of angry customers have been inundating dozens of Limbaugh's corporate sponsors, demanding that they cut ties with the program.

So far, Sleep Number, The Sleep Train, Quicken Loans, Legal Zoom and Citrix have pulled ads from the program, and several others are considering following their lead.

ThinkProgress is collecting reactions from social media sites like Twitter and Facebook on Storify. Here's a look at some responses so far:

“ Recent comments by Rush Limbaugh do not align w/our values, so we made decision to immediately suspend all advertising on that program.
SleepNumberSara a day ago

"Thanks to all of you for your concern and input. We are currently pulling all ads with Rush Limbaugh"
theSleepTrain 2 days ago

"@moughthere As of today, LegalZoom has suspended all advertising on the Rush Limbaugh show."
LegalZoom 16 hours ago

"We have listened to our customers & have decided to cease our advertising on The Rush Limbaugh Show immediately."
facebook.com/Citrix Citrix Systems

Oreck, Century 21 and AutoZone have been listed as advertisers by a number of websites, but each company has denied directly advertising on the program.

Several others have responded to overwhelming customer feedback by saying they would look into their current marketing strategies and whether they indirectly advertise through larger network ad buys on the radio stations that carry Limbaugh's show.

"@DCdebbie @ProFlowers DC, Rest assured, your feedback is heard. We heard about the comments and we will reevaluate our marketing plan. -Cori"
ProFlowers 2 days ago

"@stonermc We've never paid for ads on Limbaugh show. We're looking into the matter of "network buys" & will let you know what we discover."
eHarmony 2 days ago

Carbonite CEO David Friend posted on the company's blog in response to a "tremendous amount of feedback" from customers over Carbonite's sponsorship of the program, but stopped short of pulling advertising. "Outcry over Limbaugh is the worst we've ever seen," he wrote. See the whole post here:

Online Backup Blog | Carbonite
A Message from Carbonite CEO, David Friend Regarding Ads on Limbaugh
"Over the past two days we have received a tremendous amount of feedback on Rush Limbaugh's recent comments. I too am offended and very co ..."
Carbonite

Other companies though have been slow to react, or are simply ignoring mounting feedback.

We need to take a stand now against his revolting behavior. Sign our petition and let Sandra Fluke know that you are on her side.

Update

An earlier version of this post listed the Cleveland Cavaliers as one of the companies that dropped Limbaugh, based on a report from WFNY. Although the Cavaliers have the same owner as Quicken Loans, WFNY's report was subsequently removed. It does not appear that the Cavaliers advertised on Limbaugh's show

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Obama Is President Again Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=11104"><span class="small">Charles Pierce, Esquire</span></a>   
Saturday, 03 March 2012 10:39

Pierce writes: "He grins. He kids people, even the people who faint at the beginning of his speeches. ('Always have something to eat before going to see the president,' he said.) He is relaxed about the job of politics. He is the only president of the United States - real or prospective - that I've seen in months."

President Barack Obama is taking his cues from the shrill primary campaigning of the GOP. (photo: Jewel Samad/Getty)
President Barack Obama is taking his cues from the shrill primary campaigning of the GOP. (photo: Jewel Samad/Getty)



Obama Is President Again

By Charles P. Pierce, Esquire

03 March 12

 

his was a tough room if you showed up to talk energy policy, which the president did in a snowstorm on Thursday afternoon. The Nashua Community College gym was packed early with people who were so overdressed for the footlights that one of them keeled over in the middle of the crowd just as the president was beginning to speak. Once he got started, you could close your eyes and predict what was going to happen during his speech. Any mention of natural gas, and somebody would yell, "No fracking!" Wild applause ensued every time Wall Street oil speculators took a hiding. Uncontrolled joy broke out any time the president took a whack at Congress for doing nothing, or simply for not doing what he wanted.

After several months of watching the Republican primary process, I can't tell you what a cool breeze it was to watch a politician who looks at a crowd and doesn't see a group of potential marks (Romney), a collection of your fellow Elect marching with you through the dystopic Sinai that is America (Santorum), a gaggle of goldbugs (Paul), or the class of half-bright sophomores that N. Leroy Gingrich sees every time he looks anywhere but into the mirror. Barack Obama is not stiff. He is not bristling with unbridled id. He grins. He kids people, even the people who faint at the beginning of his speeches. ("Always have something to eat before going to see the president," he said.) He is relaxed about the job of politics. He is the only president of the United States - real or prospective - that I've seen in months.

If that is the way Obama's going to run, somebody's giving him good advice again. He talks about the challenges Americans face, but he doesn't do it in the gloom-ridden, stalactite-festooned, minor-key funeral mass context that the Republicans talk about them. He talks in terms of "boundless ingenuity" and "unbridled optimism." This is the way Ronald Reagan spoke on the stump in 1980. Sure, Jimmy Carter sent the country to hell in an handbasket but, by god, the work of climbing out of the handbasket was going to be fun. For all the Reagan cargo-cultism of the Republican party, this is the part of the old goober's charm than none of the Republican candidate have yet mastered. It's become an instinct in the president now.

It was striking to compare how the president talked to the students here with the now-famous Rick Santorum dickery about how he is a "snob" for wanting as many people as possible to go to college. The president talked to these students at an out-of-the-way community college as though they're all going to waltz right out of here and into the Apollo program. "I see the young people here - and the ones that are young at heart," he said. "We need you to study hard, and to work hard, and to summon up that unbridled optimism that led previous generations to overcome the challenges of their time."

On energy policy, he walked a very fine line. He talked about how the country's dependence on foreign oil had dropped since he became president, even passing out a chart - "we'll be using visual aids today" - to that effect. He talked about all the wells that have been drilled and all the pipelines that have been built and all the permits for drilling and pipelines that his administration is planning to hand out, which nearly lost him the crowd. He got it back by talking about the regulations he's put in place "to make sure we don't have a spill like we had in the Gulf a while back." He made no mention of the Keystone XL pipeline, except to point out that he'd given permission to open a pipeline in Oklahoma that may one day be part of the larger project. The "all of the above" strategy is going to be truly that, which means it's not going to make everybody happy.

But what truly got them on their feet was a thwacking attack on the $4 billion in subsidies that the federal government gives to the oil companies every year. "Those companies are making record profits right now," he said. "Anyone here think Congress should still give them $4 billion a year? That's outrageous. It's inexcusable. I want them to vote on those in the next couple of weeks. Let your member of Congress know where you stand, New Hampshire. I know where I stand.

"It's not going to be a long, smooth road. Some companies will fail. [Low bridge there for Solyndra.] Some experiments won't work all the time. But as long as I'm president, I am not going to walk away from clean energy. I won't see the markets for solar, wind, and battery technologies go to China because some politicians don't want to take the chance on them. With or without this Congress, I'm going to do everything I can. They've got their business. I've got you."

Except for, occasionally, Ron Paul, none of the Republicans talk like this. Oh, they talk about common purpose and common sacrifice, but they don't seem to have any goal for all the effort except to replace the president with one of them. This was a speech, a run-of-the-mill campaign stop, that was impervious to the kind of sidetracking and bombast that has made such an unpleasant circus act out of the doings on the other side. It was a centrist speech, to be sure, but one hung thick with banners and ribbons and summer band concert music. Elsewhere, of course, the funeral march moves on toward Ohio and Super Tuesday.

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