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[Hutchinson] The ‘Conspiracy Bug' Can Kill You

We run this column in honor of National Black HIV/AIDS Awareness Day—Monday, Feb. 7. See details at bottom of this column.

A recent RAND Corp. study found that huge numbers of blacks still believe that the AIDS epidemic in black communities is a genocidal plot. The conspirators are: secret government labs, the CIA, diabolical doctors, international health agencies or unnamed forces. The RAND study conducted in conjunction with Oregon State University appeared in the Feb. 1 edition of the Journal of Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndromes. It's the most extensive probe yet of AIDS conspiracy theories among blacks.

AIDS activists say that loose and irresponsible talk about AIDS is a reason many blacks resist pleas to get tested and treated, fail to consistently use condoms and also fail to back AIDS prevention and education programs. Blacks account for more than half of the new AIDS and HIV cases in America. Among black women and young persons, the figures are even more horrific. According to government reports, in 2003, blacks aged 18-to-24 made up four out of five new AIDS cases. Black women made up nearly three out of four of new AIDS cases.

Though the RAND study is the most extensive study yet to document AIDS conspiracy notions among blacks, the study did not answer why, despite all scientific and medical evidence to the contrary, this dangerous and deadly racial paranoia is still rampant among so many blacks. Contrary to what many AIDS activists say, this is not solely a cop-out by them to evade personal responsibility for profligate sexual practices or to reject AIDS education programs.

The conspiracy bug has long bit many Americans. Spanning a political spectrum of extreme rightists, Aryan Nation racists, Millennium Christian fundamentalists, leftist radicals, and fraternal lodges and societies. Their Internet sites bristle with purported official documents that detail and expose these alleged plots. These groups and thousands of individuals believe that government, corporate or international Zionist groups busily hatch secret plots and concoct hidden plans to wreak havoc on their lives. Hollywood and the TV industry churn out countless movies and TV shows in which shadowy government groups topple foreign governments, assassinate government leaders and brainwash operatives to do dirty deeds.

The conspiracy bug bit many blacks hard beginning in the 1960s. They were convinced that murky government agencies flooded the ghettoes with drugs, alcohol, gangs and guns to sow division and disunity among black organizations, eliminate militant black leaders, jail black politicians and quash black activism. Their conspiracy fantasies were fueled by well-documented spying by Army Intelligence, the Justice Department and the FBI on the Nation of Islam, the Black Panther Party, the NAACP and other black groups, the Tuskegee experiment that stretched from 1932 into the 1970s in which federal officials knowingly withheld curative medical treatment to black men in Alabama infected with syphilis, and the corruption probes that targeted black elected officials in the 1980s.

The jewel in the conspiracy theory crown was the murder of Martin Luther King Jr. in April 1968. The claim was that King's convicted killer, James Earl Ray was a Lee Harvey Oswald-type patsy and that government spy agencies—most notably the FBI—orchestrated King's murder. In 1997, the King family jumped on the conspiracy bandwagon and demanded that Ray get a new trial presumably to ferret out the racist or government conspirators behind his murder.

There has never been any solid proof that the FBI or other government agents killed King. Yet the ferocity of the FBI's secret war against King, and the many questions the FBI probe into his assassination left unanswered created enough of a wedge for many blacks to continue to shout conspiracy even after Ray's death in 1998.

The AIDS conspiracy theories are hardly new either. The conspiracy rumblings began almost from the moment that AIDS began to sledgehammer black communities in the 1980s. While government agencies in America have occasionally played fast and loose with the law and even the rules of democracy, and have spied on and harassed black leaders and groups, there has never been any evidence of any organized government plan to commit genocide against blacks. Still, the fervent belief that there is such a plan is just enough to make many blacks panic and see hidden plots against them everywhere.

If, as AIDS activists claim, and the RAND study at least inferentially seems to confirm, reckless conspiracy theories about the AIDS plague among blacks are a cause of needless deaths and suffering within black communities, black leaders must speak out loudly against them.

It's not a matter of racial one-upmanship. It's a matter of saving lives.

Earl Ofari Hutchinson is an author and political analyst. He is the author of "The Crisis in Black and Black"(Middle Passage Press, 1998).

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From http://www.blackaidsday.org/ ...

The history of the National Black HIV/AIDS Awareness Day (NBHAAD) dates back to 1999, when the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's (CDC) Division of HIV/AIDS Prevention (DHAP) funded five national non-profit organizations known as the Community Capacity Building Coalition (CCBC): Concerned Black Men, Inc. of Philadelphia; Health Watch Information and Promotion Services; Jackson State University - Mississippi Urban Research Center; National Black Alcoholism & Addictions Council; and National Black Leadership Commission on AIDS.

NBHAAD seeks to get individuals tested, educated, and involved in HIV prevention activities. The CCBC assisted with leadership development of Community-Based Organizations (CBOs), established and linked networks, built community prevention infrastructure, promoted technical assistance among CBOs and raised awareness of African-American communities.

The CCBC held quarterly meetings to discuss activities, trainings, and/or events that each organization was doing around the country. The concept was to have a day to recognize the devastation of HIV/AIDS and to promote testing, education and involvement within African-American communities.

On February 23, 2001, the CCBC organized the first annual National Black HIV/AIDS Awareness Day. NBHAAD is now recognized on February 7th of each year.

In memory of Louis E. Harris (1947-2003) - we will miss his kind smile and warm words of encouragement. It is our hope that the NBHAAD will continue to build the capacity of CBOs and community stake holders to increase awareness and prevent HIV.

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