Thursday, November 13, 2008

Unique and inexpensive Christmas gifts

High Road Gallery in Worthington (across from the library) announces its much loved and much awaited special event for 2008 :

NIFTY GIFTS FOR UNDER FIFTY.

This event will begin on Sunday, November 30th from 1-5 PM when you will meet the artists, sample cookies and punch and find a wide range of exciting personal gifts for your loved ones handmade by Ohio artists.

The show will run for JUST ONE WEEK, DECEMBER 1ST-DECEMBER 6TH . Hours for the gallery are extended this week from 10 AM to 5PM and open until 8PM on Tuesday and Thursday so you can come in after work. Visa and M/C available for for this show.

This is your chance to stock up on very unique hand made gifts prepared by a wide range of Ohio artists. There will be small paintings and photographs hanging on the walls, many varieties of jewelry, fiber creations to use or wear, paper creations, ornaments and all types of greeting cards, purses and totes, scarves ceramics, embellished serving pieces and many items you would not have imagined. The gallery website is www.highroadgallery.org (from their e-mail) .

Ouch! That hurt!


This morning I reached around the kitty with my left hand for my coffee cup while reading Martin Luther and felt a sharp pain in my ring finger. I wear 3 rings--wedding, engagement, and a special band that I think was a Valentine gift about 3 or 4 years ago. But I'd worn a different 3rd ring for years before that--anniversary of our first date I think (my husband is very romantic). Something got pinched. After each move toward the cup, it would hurt more, so finally took the rings off. Oh my. All the fat is gone on that finger from 48 years of wearing rings. So when it's naked, it looks sort of deformed. It used to be a 5, but I think it's gone down a bit. Just rubbed it away--probably went to my hips, that's what happened to my ear lobes. I finally put the wedding band back on, but put the other two away--I won't say where because the cat sometimes reads my blog, and she loves to climb up on the furniture and knock things on the floor.

Palin Africa Story fake?

Nobody knows you're a dog on the internet, as the saying goes. Blogger poses as McCain policy adviser and disses Palin. Well, what a surprise. I'm really a 16 year old posing as a retired librarian so I can use big words to fool Murray. And the media buy into it (Palin stories). I wonder if he was the source of the clothing cost stories too?
    24-hour network news channel MSNBC has retracted a story it ran claiming a source inside the McCain campaign that Governor Sarah Palin was unsure of whether Africa was a country or a continent.

    The channel says it was duped by a filmmaker named Eitan Gorlin and partner Dan Mirvish, who posed as a McCain policy adviser in a blog. The men allegedly took the name Martin Eisenstadt, a senior fellow at the Harding Institute for Freedom and Democracy. But neither that person nor the institute exist.

    The "fake" adviser claimed Governor Sarah Palin mistakenly believed Africa was a country instead of a continent.

    The former Republican vice presidential candidate has denied the report from the time it was released.

    This isn't the first time "Eisenstadt's" name has been used in a phony report. The Huffington Post once quoted the phony adviser in a story on John McCain and the Hilton family. Other duped outlets include the Los Angeles Times and The New Republic. 700WLW
But how many believed Palin who never tried to be anything but what she was?

NYT story.

Pathologizing the unfortunate and blaming the rest of us

Two stories were featured in the Columbus Dispatch August 27 article about the working poor not having health insurance, but both demonstrated the government insurance system for low income families is working--they do have health insurance--they don't have the employment they desire. But that's not the government's fault, it's not my fault, and in neither case, is it their fault. Getting a teaching degree isn't the same as getting a job in a market like Columbus, Ohio, loaded with colleges and plenty of teachers; getting diabetes may mean you chose the wrong parents.

One family has dual incomes, $80,000 in student debt, and 5 children, and therefore qualifies for Medicaid. The other is a single parent with a debilitating disease, who lost her job, and was given free medication until she qualified for assistance. In other words, the system, patchwork though it is, is working but it doesn't allow for the perks of a "middle class life style."
    Four years ago, Gwen Brown, 31, and her husband were struggling to make ends meet while raising their five school-age children. Then she worked as a resource leader for the Girls Scouts and her husband worked as a barber.

    She hoped her finances would improve after earning a bachelor's degree last May at Capital University. But with no full-time teaching position, she still qualifies for Medicaid for her children.

    She owes $80,000 in student loans and wonders why she's still straddling the poverty line with a college degree.

    "We did things to change our lives and nothing has changed," said Brown of the West Side. "That's where my frustration lies."

    Last year Penny Self of Grove City, who has had diabetes for about 12 years, lost her job and health insurance. Free samples of her medication from her former doctor kept her healthy until she got Medicaid.

    Even before Self lost her job at Sofa Express as a credit representative last year, she tried not to make too many doctors' office visits because she could barely afford the $25 co-payments on her company insurance, she said.

    "Now if I get sick or if my son gets sick I don't have to struggle with the co-payments and I don't have to try to be a doctor at home when he is sick," said Self, 43.
The author of the article intended to write about Ohio's working poor without health insurance, but her examples were just the opposite.

The non-profits and housing agencies swing into high gear


The same agencies who decided that low income families and middle class minorities needed to build wealth through home ownership (and if you ever owned a home you know this like floating a boat with an unplugged hole in the bottom), are back at the money spigot.

These are the agencies who
  1. helped the clients apply to the state housing trust fund for the down payment,
  2. who took them to the bank or loan company for money guaranteed by the federal government for the sub-prime mortgage,
  3. who then took fees to keep their own staff paid,
  4. who provided them with a one hour workshop on home ownership in their native language,
  5. who found them rehabbed or low end homes in “at risk” or “weak market” neighborhoods which this agency first purchased and rehabbed,
these same agencies are now asking for more federal and state money to run foreclosure programs and assistance for the very people they helped put in their homes; or money to bulldoze, board up or acquire them for future rehabbing (and start it all over). And if they can’t stop the “disinvestment and decline”, they propose to use the money to buy the home, and lease it back. In other words, put low income people into rentals, which might have been a better plan to begin with. Link to “Columbus and Franklin County Foreclosure Working Group, Prevention and Recovery Advisory Plan, October 2008”

There may be a combination of reasons for a person or family to be “low income.” I know it sounds mean to suggest that there are differences between rich people and poor people and the people in between, but someone needs to address the elephant in the living room if I may borrow a phrase from AA. There are some things a nice home just can't be expected to fix.

  • Low job skills,
  • low education level,
  • low intelligence,
  • poor interpersonal skills,
  • poor communication skills either as a native speaker of English, or English as a second language--speaking and writing,
  • high family disruption and dysfunction--divorced or single parent trying to compete with a 2 parent family,
  • high alcohol and drug use, contributing to failed drug tests, DUI, short term prison stays,
  • high mobility, frequent moves, grass is always greener syndrome
  • low mobility, refuses to leave an area of bad employment opportunities
  • poor health, disability
  • age--either too young, or too old to be useful to an employer
  • small ambition, not competitive, won't take in-house training or transfers
  • lazy or incompetent.
  • HIV alarmism has fiscal and behavorial consequences


    Sometimes, I don’t understand alarmists. On September 16, David R. Holtgrave, PhD Professor and Chair, Department of Health, Behavior & Society, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health testified before the Committee on Oversight and Government Reform (Waxman, chair) on prevention funding for HIV/AIDS.

    He began by reporting that the HIV incidence is higher than previously thought (55,000 or 56,000 instead of 40,000 infections per year) and is rising particularly among gay men. Shocking right? Probably that statement made the evening news, but not what followed. He then went on to report that “the HIV transmission rate dropped from 92.3 in 1980, to 31.2 in 1985, to 6.6 in 1991. It stayed at roughly this level until 1997 when, after the advent of highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART), the transmission rate went up temporarily to almost 7.5. Thereafter, it continued once again on a downward trend. In 2006, we estimate the transmission rate to be approximately just under 5.0 (4.98). This means that for every 100 persons living with HIV in the US, there are just under five new infections on average in a year. That also means that over 95% of persons living with HIV in the US are not transmitting the virus to someone else is a given year. Because the transmission rate is rather low in the US, it will be very challenging for the nation to push that transmission rate number down even further.”

    I thought that sounded pretty good. Not only are infections down among gay men, but they have almost disappeared from the blood supply, from infants getting it from their mothers, and the IV drug users. So what’s the alarm? No one comes to a committee to say their funding needs are down. No, they need more funding to get that rate down to zero, as near as I can tell. Current funding for prevention is $18.6 billion, or $52,000 per infection NOT transmitted. And that saves on treatment money. Holtgrave was concerned that in real dollars, prevention funding was slipping since 2002 (Hmm, seems to coincide with Bush years even though transmission rates are down since the Clinton years.)

    HAART (highly active antiretroviral therapy) works, abstinence works, keeping bi-sexual men away from women works, and reducing intravenous drug use works. However, after the advent of HAART transmission rates went back up--before that, the accomplishments were in behavior, not drug therapy. After HAART, it would seem gay and bi-sexual men thought they could go back to the fun, games and wild times of the 80s.

    Here’s my idea for prevention. Let’s ask for a more responsibility and volunteerism from the gay community--the way it used to be when people were afraid of this disease. They are the best educated and wealthiest demographic in the country. They worked very hard 25 years ago to combat this disease, now it’s time for the younger generation of gays who never saw friends die or lifted a spoonful of soup to a wasted skeleton to step up and do the prevention thing, and not wait for the government to funnel even more money into their bad behavior and life style.

    Can you afford to defend your beliefs in court?

    A Christian, Jewish or Muslim organization ought to be able to select its own members, but they may have to defend themselves. I think under President Obama we'll see much more testing of Christian groups who don't buy into the party sex line.
      Alpha Delta Chi, a Christian sorority with 14 active chapters nationwide, is straightforward about its membership requirements: churchgoing Christians only; no smoking or illegal drugs; no premarital sex; and please, no drinking to the point that it would reflect poorly on Christianity. A small committee works with members who break the rules, said [a someone who asked me in 2021 to remove her name]  at Georgia Tech, where a chapter began five years ago. But the group says it isn't just about rules, it's about young women trying to live like Christ. "All the girls are in Bible studies. We also do sisterhood retreats and outreach," she said. Many campuses welcome the combination of old-time religion with Greek-letter social groups, but others haven't. At the University of Florida, Beta Upsilon Chi filed a federal discrimination suit last year after administrators refused to officially recognize the fraternity because it required members to be Christians. The school considered the requirement discriminatory, and the fraternity said it was wrongly deprived of meeting space and the ability to recruit on campus. The 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals has ordered the school to recognize the group as a fraternity while the lawsuit winds its way through the legal system, and Beta Upsilon Chi has asked the court to make that recognition permanent. An attorney for the Christian Legal Society, Timothy F. Tracey, said Christian Greek-letter groups have been opening on the nation's campuses more frequently since the mid-1990s, and such court fights have been rare. Link "Religion and Greek Life"

    Taxing the rich is not the solution

    We saw even before the election how afraid of an Obama presidency the markets were. And it has only worsened. You can't say we weren't warned. You can't just blame out right subsidies for the poor and low income, lo these many years, a gravy train Obama wants to enlarge. For many, many years partnerships of private industry, city and state governments and the federal government have been encouraged at every level, especially in construction of housing stock and rebuilding the inner core of cities. Even churches got in the game with their non-profits. So what happens when all levels are struggling? Private businesses lay off workers, the state then gets less tax revenues, runs low on unemployment funds (scraping the bottom in Ohio), the church tithes are cut back and the federal government is bailing out the banks, insurance companies and Detroit who are calling in their markers and favors. It's not unlike when a married couple both work for the same company, living well in a nice house, SUVs and big vacations, and have all their retirement assets in company stock. When the company goes belly up, there's no plan B. Mr. Obama, you can't get blood from a turnip. Time to reject all your lefty buddies and do what's right. Keep the Bush tax cuts, and cut government spending to reinvigorate the economy.

    Wednesday, November 12, 2008

    A sermon on preparing to die

    Martin Luther wrote some very practical material. This one written November 1, 1519, might be a good to read while listening to Henry Paulson and other government officials try to explain all the bailouts that will ruin us. Luther actually makes 20 distinct points, but only the first three matter, because 4-20 expands on three. At my other blog.

    CityLiving Network and Homeport of Columbus

    Here’s another one.

    With this much money and effort over 20 years, how can there be a single person or family in the Columbus, Ohio, area who doesn’t have adequate, safe, dry shelter? The reason is federally or state supported housing programs are not just about housing, they are about changing lives. And what's this? October 24, 2008 grant for Homeport. Haven't we just been through a bailout?
      Millions of dollars in tax credits will be steered towards the redevelopment of low-income communities in Ohio and Columbus thanks to a U.S. Treasury Department award.
    Dear reader--housing doesn’t change lives. Marriage does. Parenthood does. Faith in God does. Employment does. Education can. Art and music can. Pets might. Leisure activities don't. Substance abuse will definitely change your life downward. But not housing. Ask any landlord who turned the keys over to a careless, slovenly tenant. Housing doesn’t create safe neighborhoods; it doesn’t get transportation issues funded; it doesn’t improve health; it doesn’t pass bond issues. In partnership with the private sector, this kind of housing for low income people creates jobs and profits for . . .the construction companies.

    "Columbus Housing Partnership (CHP) is a private, nonprofit organization [when you see this term linked with housing, it means government grants fund it, but it hides how many workers are dependent on the government for their income] founded in the belief that a decent and affordable home is the cornerstone of family life and a healthy community. For over twenty years, CHP has provided quality, affordable housing and related services to low to moderate income households in Columbus and the surrounding area. CHP has developed over 4,000 affordable homes which have served over 23,000 people.

    To further that belief and in 2004, CHP created Homeport the sales division, to build communities for sale that provide buyers with the blend of urban sophistication and suburban style. CHP’s Homeport division’s commitment is to provide quality homes at an affordable price. Our specialty is helping first-time homebuyers get the most value for their hard-earned money. Homeport partners with you to help you realize your dream of homeownership.”
      North of Broad (NOBO)- North of Broad is a development in the King-Lincoln District, developed by Homeport and in collaboration with the City of Columbus and Trevor Custom Homes.

      The Crossing at Joyce - Homeport has partnered with Rockford Homes to offer buyers a new suburban style home with an urban location at the intersection of Joyce Ave. and 24th Ave. Buyers can select from several models to build.

      Restore Columbus is a comprehensive rehabilitation program to renovate existing homes throughout the City of Columbus and in partnership with the City's Home Again initiative.

      Home Again was created in February, 2006 in an effort to eradicate the 3,200 vacant homes in the Columbus. Mayor Coleman has committed $25 million over 6 years with a goal of putting 1,000 vacant properties back into productive use by 2012.
        "In 2006, Home Again was responsible for initiating 105 roof repair cases; 96 completed at a cost of $1,355,833.* The City demolished 27 properties at a cost of $117,112 and another 52 were demolished by private owners." Link

    *Does that roof repair of 96 homes sound a tad high? That's over $14,000 a piece. Advent Lutheran Church at Tremont and Kenny Rds. in Upper Arlington had to have it's entire roof replaced after Hurricane Ike--and it cost $5,200--and it's very large with peaks and elevations.

    Problematize--the word that invents problems

    Did you ever wonder how we get meaningless jargon, particularly in government documents, feel-good academic fields such as women's studies and black studies, anthropology, and American literature? First you find a word or term that everyone understandands, like illegal immigration, and you declare that you have a problem with it. You problematize the term by writing scholarly papers with words no one would ever use, "denaturalize the reification of this distinction," (don't ask me, I just wrote it down). Then you start substituting words to cover up the phrase or term you have said is a problem (for you). If need be, you can even present a paper at a conference about the problem word or phrase.

    Illegal immigration has two terms that had to be problematized by academics who write about it to get promotion, tenure and a paycheck: 1) illegal and 2) immigration. Both words imply someone is where he doesn't belong because someone has said so. In this case, you get rid of both. Illegal becomes undocumented, irregular, unauthorized or clandestine, or if really desperate you can use extra-legal. And immigration becomes migration, or labor, or worker, or visitor--choosing a less obnoxious term because there is no sense in academe that a nation might have rights to a border. Unless you're speaking of a non-western, socialist or communist nation. Alien absolutely is not a good choice, because that too has been problematized. It needs to sound sort of like the migration of birds, or seals. No boundaries. Freedom. No problema.

    Notice I have not put quotation marks around the words that scholars problematize. But they do. And they do that to show the reader that they recognize the word or phrase is a problem, and will cause upset to the reader's sensitivities. So a scholar writing about illegal immigration would write it like this: "illegal immigration."

    This has been a public service from a retired librarian.


    The 2008 Election Map


    Although they were out marketed by the Team Obama geniuses, money raisers and crooks, and totally bamboozled by the press and poling agencies, the voters didn't overwhelming elect Barack Obama--not even the much lauded and sought after youth vote. It wasn't even the record turn out that was predicted--all that early voting just was a cover to register more illegal voters. And most of the country had great weather on voting day (remember in 2004 Democrats blamed the rain in the midwest).

    No, it was just like the Bush-Clinton election of 1992. It was the Republicans who stayed home and refused to vote or voted 3rd party because they didn't like the candidate they had. Republicans elected Bill Clinton; Republicans elected Barack Obama. That's who gave us the most far left President in our history. I'm sure they were out there somewhere, but I didn't meet a single supporter of the McCain/Palin ticket for whom McCain was his first choice. Only when Palin joined him was there any spark of enthusiasm. But Republicans have never had the party solidarity of the Democrats, who are the real mind-numbed robots, despite their self-image as sophisticated, astute, thinking voters. That's the number one thing I noticed when I changed party registration in 2000. It was almost culture shock. And although it was refreshing to not be chained to party-think, at election time it was a bit disconcerting.

    When polled about the issues alone, voters rarely put Obama's plans on top. He and his fellow Democrats participated in the biggest economic meltdown since 1929 in the economy, yet only his coaches knew how to take advantage and blame it on Bush, or you the voter, or the greed of Wall Street. Have you looked at his list of bundlers or mega-donors? They are huge in Wall Street banks and hedge funds, whether Asian, Indian, middle eastern, or pork fed Americans. Why malign your own donors? Easy. 1) It takes the focus off Congress, who is the real culprit, and 2) To bring down and take over the smaller entities to reduce competition. The same reason the corporate giants support all the e-regulations and are dancing behind the green band wagon--it destroys the real competition--the smaller, innovative, quicker guys. It's not all that different than giving away your software at no cost to put the competition out of business, or offering two dollar off coupons to temporarily refocus the housewife's attention to your product at the market until they can't compete (and then raise the price when the competition is dead).

    I don't blame Republicans for being angry that McCain wasn't their choice, but they sure shot themselves in the foot. Look at the map. Where are the major social problems in the country? Which cities and counties have been investing in and expanding the War on Poverty of the 1960s for forty years? Where are the expanding crime, the biggest job loss, the strongest unions, and the most fatherless households? The bluest of the blue states. That's the direction the whole country is moving.

    Tuesday, November 11, 2008

    Questions that found my blog today

    Roten cheese and saling ships.
      why isnt good for the health the fungus from the roten cheese

      phil dirt and the dozers lyrics to aarp song

      rachel carson silent spring professor sierra club 43 fiction years pheasant shell

      short poems on saling ships std 1

      look how fast i can type without even looking at the words i can type so so fast. i bet you are jealous! so, i can teach you for this one time fee of $25.99!!!

      senior citizens earn their paychecks

      Living with my 88 year old father-in-law is affectinf my health

    Obama--the most anti-life official at any level in the USA

    Whether or not the executive orders will come as fast as the press says--
    • removing morality clauses from PepFAR funding (Africa where condoms are pushed for HIV protection, but don't work well in the culture),
    • granting more government money for embryonic stem cell (it has never been illegal as the press loves to report and the majority of all stem cell research happens in the USA),
    • or removing all the inroads the pro-life forces have made at the state level (1.2 million abortions performed in the USA in 2005, down 25% since 1990),
    it was clear even in the campaign literature and speeches, that he will be the most anti-life President we've ever had, even considering the almost non-stop wars we've been involved in since the 17th century for a variety of power and political reasons.

    To encourage more abortions when they have decimated generations of African Americans? Thirty-two percent of legal abortions are of African American babies, yet blacks are only about 12% of the population. I've never seen Barack Obama as a black man, and I wonder if he does either.

    To promote embryonic stem cell research when great strides have been made for cheaper and better uses of other cells from skin to testes?

    To remove the rights of parents to have a say in their female child's health? How anti-family and anti-life is that? To allow an aborted baby born alive to struggle without even palative care before it meets its pitiful end--what monster would vote for that fearing it might weaken Roe v. Wade? I don't think he's spoken to euthanasia of the terminally ill, Alzhiemer's patients, persistent vegetative state patients, or bloggers over 70, but I'm sure he'll provide guidance since we're all just taking up space and wasting health care dollars.

    And for all you Roman Catholics who have a fantasy that by throwing even more trillions at WIC, food stamps, housing block grants, job training, and day care for infants, somehow you will reduce abortions and replace fathers, think again. It hasn't stopped the murder of millions of unborn in the last 30 years. And do you really want your Catholic hospitals performing abortions?
      "Along with their theological opposition to the procedure, church leaders say they worry that any expansion in abortion rights could require Catholic hospitals to perform abortions or face legal sanctions. Auxiliary Bishop Thomas Paprocki of Chicago said the hospitals would close rather than comply.

      During the campaign, many prelates had spoken out on abortion more boldly than they had in 2004, telling Catholic politicians and voters that the issue should be the most important consideration in setting policy and deciding which candidate to back.

      Yet, according to exit polls, 54 percent of Catholics chose Obama, who is Protestant. The new bishops' statement is meant to drive home the point in a way that cannot be misconstrued. Link."

    Abstinence--The Scarlet Letter of the Left

    There are few things as political as AIDS and poverty. And sexual abstinence pretty much wipes out both, but since you can't tax it, and it has a religious and moral connotation, it is maligned as impractical at best and unconscionable at worst. Take PEPFAR reauthorization. That's the President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief, and the original 2003 act was reauthorized on July 30, 2008. In just 5 years, the treatment with life saving medicine went from 50,000 to 1.73 million, primarily in sub-Saharan Africa. This was applauded even by its critics. However, the most successful focus country in prevention was Uganda, which waged a strong abstinence (Africa style) program. And yes, now the "don't condemn the condom" troops are on full attack against the "zero grazing campaign" of Uganda, which is probably why the 2008 reauthorization caved on the abstinence funding. The powerful pro-abortion groups need more ways to reduce the populations of blacks, whether in the U.S. or Africa, and our new president will certainly be going along with this. According to the Catholic Family and Human Rights Institute
      "Uganda’s rejection of the condom-emphasizing approach, also known as the ABC model (Abstinence, Being Faithful, Condoms as a last resort), has earned it the enmity of the orthodox AIDS lobby. AIDS 2008 featured a symposium session chaired by Frances Kissling – the former president of “Catholics for Choice,” who stepped down last year – aimed at discrediting the ABC approach as “ideological.”

      Still, the Ugandan model is attracting notice. India’s National Council of Educational Research and Training recently announced that it would embrace the Ugandan emphasis on abstinence and fidelity in its sex education curricula. Significantly, a study authored by a research team headed by Harvard’s Daniel Halperin that appeared in the May 2008 issue of Science magazine, “Reassessing HIV Prevention,” found empirical evidence supporting aspects of the Ugandan approach."
    The 2003 requirement that 33% of prevention funds be spent on abstinence-until-marriage programs was removed in the 2008 renewal, reduced to "meaningful support of monogamy and fidelity." Critics consider abstinence and faithfulness programs a distortion of priorities (i.e., Christian moralizing), preferring instead the unreliableness of the occasionally used and leaky condom. Also, groups counseling abortion services may now get funding for HIV services. You will read hundreds of studies and documents saying women and children are at risk from abstinence based programs--but it's rare to see anything that says abstinence is really the only solution.

    While western based liberals in both the government and the increasingly politicized medical field have wrung their hands over the "moralizing and constraining spending mandates" of PEPFAR (JAMA, Nov. 5, 2008 p. 2047), Uganda excelled in controlling AIDS by using the common sense approach--the African way. Helen Epstein’s new book, “The Invisible Cure: Africa, the West and the Fight Against Aids" is reviewed and linked at Abstinence Africa which may show just one more way Westerners have misjudged the African culture, particularly polygamy.
      "In Africa, HIV spread among ordinary people who were nowhere near as promiscuous as high-risk Western groups such as prostitutes or gay men. By contrast, about 40 percent of Ugandan men and 30 percent of women have ongoing relationships with a small number of people -- perhaps two or three -- at a time. These ‘concurrent’ relationships might overlap for months or years, or even, in the case of polygamous marriages, a lifetime.

      As Epstein explains, these concurrent relationships are at higher risk for spreading HIV for two reasons. First, a person recently infected with HIV may be a hundred times more likely to transmit the virus than someone who has been infected for a few months or years. Most Westerners tend to practice “serial monogamy,” having only one partner at a time, and will usually only infect a current partner. By contrast, a polygamous man who becomes infected with HIV is likely to infect all his concurrent partners.

      Concurrent relationships are also at higher risk for spreading HIV because the degree of intimacy and trust in these relationships means that people don’t think they need to use condoms. Many faithful African women became infected with HIV because of their husbands’ behavior. Few health officials from international aid organizations were aware of any of this.

      Many western AIDS researchers believe that promoting condoms among high risk groups, such as prostitutes and their clients is the best way to slow the spread of HIV. But HIV continued to spread throughout eastern and southern Africa, even when condom use soared. Epstein argues that some of the condom campaigns backfired. “By associating AIDS with beer drinking, premarital sex, prostitution … womanizing and rape, the lusty condom ads ... clashed disastrously with local sensibility concerning decency and self-respect,” Epstein writes. One of her African sources stated bluntly: “The campaigns were totally wrong. The message was you had to be a prostitute or truck driver to get AIDS.”

      A Ugandan prevention campaign focused specifically on issues of concurrent relationships. They developed the slogans “Love Carefully” and “Zero Grazing” – meaning, in the words of the head of Uganda’s AIDS Control Program, “avoid indiscriminate and free-ranging sexual relations.” These slogans were posted on public buildings, broadcast on radio, and bellowed in speeches by government officials. The Ugandan Association of Co-Wives and Concubines -- hardly something any Western aid organization would have instituted -- contributed as well. These women policed the behavior of polygamous men, encouraging them to avoid the casual affairs that could endanger all their wives and future children. One of their messages was: “If your husband is unfaithful and is going to kill you with AIDS, you divorce him.”

      The result of all this was a steep decline in the number of sexual partners, a basic step in controlling any sexually transmitted disease."
    Of course, AIDS gets the focus and money, but that's not what kills most vulnerable African children--it's diarrheal diseases and malaria. In their concern over bird eggs launched by the non-scientist Rachel Carson over 30 years ago, western governments and companies were quickly pressured into removing DDT from the arsenal of weapons in the war against disease before anything else was available (this method continues today in most environmental issues). This killed millions of Africans and disabled millions more. Instead, the missionaries for malaria when viewing the havoc they created, moved to the mosquito condom--the bed net, which probably requires even more care with application than the other type on an eager body part. And of course, installing wells to pump clean water means someone has to take of them. Where's the money in that?

    Yes, there's just not much money in clean water, dead mosquitoes and women taking control to guard their own and their children's health through chastity and faithfulness.

    And on money, both the left and the right can agree.

    Pray for another Carter

    I noticed this at a comment at another blog--no identification, so I can attribute: "As for right now, Republicans should pray Obama is a new Carter. If he is the next FDR, prepare for forty years in the desert."

    Monday, November 10, 2008

    What Michelle Obama's example says to women

    Michelle Obama is about to become one of the most powerful women in the world, with more influence than Oprah and more scrutiny than Hillary. She has an education and a husband, and that is the key to unlock the poverty door for women with children, and not a single additional nanny state program is needed for that. There are hundreds of grants, loans and scholarships for college; and for marriage, just hold out for the right guy and start the family after you tie the knot. I know it's not Hollywood's way, and all the Hip-Hoppers flashing bling will tell them otherwise, but all the studies show it to be true. The more we try to offer women Uncle Sam as a step-father and sugar daddy, the more we keep them in poverty.
      An education : In 2006, the working poor rate for Black women workers with less than a high school diploma was 28.9 percent, compared with 15.4 percent for Black men.

      Among high school graduates (no college), the working-poor rate of Black women (15.3 percent) was higher than that for Black men—9.0 percent.

      Among both White and Black college graduates, differences in the working poor rates of men and women essentially disappear.

      A husband : Married-couple families, regardless of whether the husband or wife was the family member in the labor force, were those least likely to fall below the poverty level (7.5 percent).

      By comparison, 12.0 percent of families maintained by men and 22.4 percent of families maintained by women were below the poverty level.

      2007 Annual Social and Economic Supplement to the Current Population Survey (CPS).

    33 Minutes





    After inking the deal with Poland in August, Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice summed up its importance: “Missile defense, of course, is aimed at no one. It is in our defense that we do this.” Obama would be wise to follow that logic and build on the success as president.

    Obama's mixed signals

    Taken any tests lately?

    Like HIV? Me either. At least, not that I know of. But apparently, according to CDC Guidelines health-care providers (i.e. doctors) should routinely screen all patients aged 13-64 years for HIV. I'm not sure about those of Medicare age--maybe we're too old to count and they like to bump us off the rolls, or we're staying out of bath houses and not shooting up. Here are the risk factors for HIV:
      A man having sex with another man even just one time.

      Taking street drugs by needle even one time.

      Trading sex for money or drugs even one time.

      Sex, even one time, with someone who would answer yes to any of the above.

      You have hemophilia and have received clotting factor concentrations.
    According to a report in JAMA (CDC/MMWR) Nov 5, 77% of persons with HIV risk factors were not tested in the preceding 12 months, and the recommendation for them is an annual test. However, 40% of the general population has been tested. 60.7% of pregnant women were tested for HIV in 2006 (lower than other infectious disease). In 2006, non-Hispanic blacks accounted for 49% of all reported cases of HIV/AIDS, and the HIV prevalence among non-Hispanic blacks was 2.1% compared with 0.4% in the over all U.S. population. (I'd cite the sources, but they aren't printed with the article which is really dumb.) Depending on how often you go to the doctor for allergies or the flu, you might be tested multiple times, and someone else scoring BINGO on all the risk factors, is never screened. Something's very wrong here. They can't keep track of the MSM who are doing all sorts of disgusting things with body parts, so they decide to test everyone? And they still can't get the gay and bisexual guys to come in for screening by changing the rules? These tests must be awfully cheap.

    They don't need to have you sign anything or give you anything in writing either. Here's the rules.

    Here's the take from the ACLU.

    If you've gotten a 3 page list of "services provided" for the last time you were in the hospital, here's the coding guidelines.

    These guidelines from 2006 were part of Bush's Domestic HIV Initiative. (Approximately $18.9 billion (83%) of the FY 2007 HIV/AIDS request was for domestic programs; $3.9 billion (17%) for global programs. Only 4% was for prevention, however. Here) The CDC allocated funds to: 23 jurisdictions in clinical settings; 67 grantees in 25 states through the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration; 41 family planning clinics grantees in 34 states through the Office of Population Affairs. And the funds were allocated primarily to test blacks. Of course, testing isn't research or treatment or behavior change--it's just to figure out if they have successful strategies in place to overcome barriers to--testing.

    Test product

    This is the only article I found on the cost effectiveness of testing the entire population. And obviously, if it's your life, or that of someone you love, you think the cost is worth it.

    Sunday, November 09, 2008

    A collection of odds and ends


    Extortion with your personal information

    And it isn't even Joe the Plumber and Gov. Strickland's snoopers.
      Express Scripts, which handles prescription drug benefits for millions of Americans, is the subject of an extortion attempt, and it has called in the FBI for help. Someone claims to have the personal information for millions of customers and is threatening to reveal it unless the company pays up.
    I'm reading it here, and have forgotten if you need to register.

    Reese Witherspoon

    Watched her first movie last night, "Man in the Moon" (1991). Really good. She was 14 playing a 14 year old who falls in love with a neighbor boy who falls in love with her older sister. Sigh. A period piece. 1957.

    Reworking and editing

    Today I spent several hours pulling out my blogs on the housing crisis, CRA, faith based initiatives, etc. (28 pages) Had to stop and clean up some errors. Blogger dot com has a problem I wish could be fixed--or that I'd remember how to work around it. (Not difficult, just open 2 windows.) If you save your entry in DRAFT, then go out and check the internet for something and click back, you may be on an earlier DRAFT and not notice it. I don't know how this happens, but I kept reversing the words "National City" and "City National" then I'd correct it, but going back, I'd get the old draft and not notice it. So I found it today. Obviously, no one read it, because on the internet everyone is an editor or critic. To add to the problem, the mistakes don't actually go away when you correct and hit PUBLISH, even if you go back and correct.

    Joined a new ministry this morning

    I'm an early riser, so I joined the group at church (7 a.m.) that reads scripture and prays before the service. Nice, quiet, peaceful. Only four of us plus the pastors. My first time, but I liked it. And it's not like choir where I had to recover the voice I lost or never had. Nobody sounds too terrific at 7 a.m.

    Fabulous art show

    Thursday evening about 5 p.m. we went to the opening of the Ohio Watercolor Society 31st Annual Exhibition at the Riffe Center Gallery, 77 South High. It will run through January 11, 2009. Oh my. Made me swoon. Don't miss it. Not only that, but God was at his artistic best with a golden sunset over the city buildings which were glistening. That was twice in one week I'd been down town. Don't get around much anymore, as the old song goes.

    When you leave down town during evening rush hour do you ever wonder if the civil engineers had stepped out for a break while designing that access to 315 North? One lane? Were they crazy? Asleep? Cruel? There must be 100,000 people trying to get to the NW suburbs. And to think there are people that do that every day.