After praising Nancy Reagan for work she never did to address AIDS, Hillary Clinton faced strong pushback for her latest lie. Hillary says she mispoke and issued a long statement but forgot to call out Nancy Reagan for doing nothing during the AIDS crisis. If you mispoke, you correct the record. Correcting the record includes stating the truth: Nancy Reagan was no hero in the AIDS crisis.
On the fight against HIV and AIDS—and on the people who really started the conversation.
Yesterday,
at Nancy Reagan’s funeral, I said something inaccurate when speaking
about the Reagans’ record on HIV and AIDS. Since then, I’ve heard from
countless people who were devastated by the loss of friends and loved
ones, and hurt and disappointed by what I said. As someone who has also
lost friends and loved ones to AIDS, I understand why. I made a mistake,
plain and simple.
I
want to use this opportunity to talk not only about where we’ve come
from, but where we must go in the fight against HIV and AIDS.
To be clear, the Reagans did not start a national conversation about HIV and AIDS.
That distinction belongs to generations of brave lesbian, gay,
bisexual, and transgender people, along with straight allies, who
started not just a conversation but a movement that continues to this
day.
The AIDS
crisis in America began as a quiet, deadly epidemic. Because of
discrimination and disregard, it remained that way for far too long.
When many in positions of power turned a blind eye, it was groups like
ACT UP, Gay Men’s Health Crisis and others that came forward to shatter
the silence — because as they reminded us again and again, Silence =
Death. They organized and marched, held die-ins on the steps of city
halls and vigils in the streets. They fought alongside a few courageous
voices in Washington, like U.S. Representative Henry Waxman, who spoke
out from the floor of Congress.
Then
there were all the people whose names we don’t often hear today — the
unsung heroes who fought on the front lines of the crisis, from hospital
wards and bedsides, some with their last breath. Slowly, too slowly,
ignorance was crowded out by information. People who had once closed
their eyes opened their hearts.
If
not for those advocates, activists, and ordinary, heroic people, we
would not be where we are in preventing and treating HIV and AIDS. Their
courage — and their refusal to accept silence as the status quo — saved
lives.
We’ve
come a long way. But we still have work to do to eradicate this disease
for good and to erase the stigma that is an echo of a shameful and
painful period in our country’s history.
This
issue matters to me deeply. And I’ve always tried to do my part in the
fight against this disease, and the stigma and pain that accompanies it.
At the 1992 Democratic National Convention, when my husband accepted
the nomination for president, we marked a break with the past by having
two HIV-positive speakers — the first time that ever happened at a
national convention. As First Lady, I brought together world leaders to
strategize and coordinate efforts to take on HIV and AIDS around the
world. In the Senate, I put forward legislation to expand global AIDS
research and assistance and to increase prevention and education, and I
proudly voted for the creation of PEPFAR and to defend and protect the
Ryan White Act. And as secretary of state, I launched a campaign to
usher in an AIDS-free generation through prevention and treatment, targeting the populations at greatest risk of contracting HIV.
The
AIDS crisis looks very different today. There are more options for
treatment and prevention than ever before. More people with HIV are
leading full and happy lives. But HIV and AIDS are still with us. They
continue to disproportionately impact communities of color, transgender
people, young people and gay and bisexual men. There are still 1.2
million people living with HIV in the United States today, with about
50,000 people newly diagnosed each year. In Sub-Saharan Africa, almost
60 percent of people with HIV are women and girls. Even though the tools
exist to end this epidemic once and for all, there are still far too
many people dying today.
That is absolutely inexcusable.
I
believe there’s even more we can — and must — do together. For
starters, let’s continue to increase HIV and AIDS research and invest in
the promising innovations that research is producing. Medications like
PrEP are proving effective in preventing HIV infection; we should expand
access to that drug for everyone, including at-risk populations. We
should call on Republican governors to put people’s health and
well-being ahead of politics and extend Medicaid, which would provide
health care to those with HIV and AIDS.
We
should call on states to reform outdated and stigmatizing HIV
criminalization laws. We should increase global funding for HIV and AIDS
prevention and treatment. And we should cap out-of-pocket expenses and
drug costs—and hold companies like Turing and Valeant accountable when
they attempt to gouge patients by jacking up the price of lifesaving
medications.
We’re
still surrounded by memories of loved ones lost and lives cut short.
But we’re also surrounded by survivors who are fighting harder than
ever. We owe it to them and to future generations to continue that fight
together. For the first time, an AIDS-free generation is in sight. As
president, I promise you that I will not let up until we reach that
goal. We will not leave anyone behind.