Posted on 07/24/2002 11:03:08 AM PDT by GeneD
Former President Bill Clinton took several swipes here Tuesday at the Bush administration for focusing on the war against terrorism at the expense of the deepening AIDS epidemic.
"I'm all for fighting in Afghanistan . . . but no one believes that we can build a safe world just by preventing and punishing bad things," Clinton said at the Rainbow/PUSH Coalition's annual convention. "We have to make some good things happen."
Clinton also talked about the choices confronting a former president over the role he should play in his post-White House years.
A former president can either "be a has-been and play golf and pretend you were a Republican, even if you weren't," Clinton told a roomful of 1,600 diners at the Hyatt Regency Chicago, who chuckled in response. "Or you have to find some way to be useful."
"So what you do," a relaxed Clinton said, "is swap power for influence."
Clinton has picked several issues to take on, including economic opportunity for the poor, ending religious and racial strife in the Middle East and Northern Ireland, and AIDS prevention and eradication.
He heads the International AIDS Trust, which raises money to fight AIDS, and just returned from the international AIDS conference in Barcelona, Spain.
"Our goal has to be to solve it, reverse it and end it," Clinton said after sounding a United Nations warning that AIDS could kill 70 million by 2020.
"And this is a disease that's 100 percent preventable," Clinton said, noting advances in prevention and treatment that have yet to reach many parts of the developing world. Women and children now account for a significant number of new infections.
In Africa, only one in a thousand infected receive the drugs they need, said Clinton, who shared the podium with the first ladies of Nigeria and Haiti, countries hit hard by the AIDS epidemic.
Clinton said fighting AIDS will give desperate countries an economic and humanitarian lift.
Without help "you're going to have millions of young boys that are more than happy enough to be mercenaries or terrorists because they'll think they'll be dead in a year or two."
Clinton urged world leaders to spend the $10 billion a year recommended by experts to fight AIDS globally, with the United States contributing about $2 billion. The United States now spends up to $1 billion on worldwide anti-AIDS efforts.
"That sounds like a lot of money," Clinton said. "But it's less than two months of the Afghan war."
U.S. officials said they are doubling international spending on AIDS in the next 18 months. At the AIDS conference in Spain, they described a new $500 million program aimed at preventing mother-to-child transmission and improving health care delivery in Africa and the Caribbean.
President Bush also has pledged $500 million to the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, a quarter of the fund's pledges and more than any other nation, U.S. officials said.
America's total spending on AIDS/HIV this year is more than $16 billion, up from $14.2 billion two years ago, with most spent in the United States.
Yeah, but it's a good start. Ya should have tried it occasionally during your frickin' eight years in office.
Clinton also talked about the choices confronting a former president over the role he should play in his post-White House years.
A former president can either "be a has-been and play golf and pretend you were a Republican, even if you weren't," Clinton told a roomful of 1,600 diners at the Hyatt Regency Chicago, who chuckled in response. "Or you have to find some way to be useful."
Slick, we'll deal with it if you stick to golfing. Be sure to invite OJ and the Rodham brothers from time to time, you'll make a splendid foursome. Now I'd much rather you take a taxpayer-paid vacation at Leavenworth, but I'll settle for you golfing the rest of your sorry life away...
Furthermore, as other posters on other threads have pointed out, this speech by Clinton is part of a wide-scale plan to disrupt the approval ratings currently enjoyed by President Bush. Whatever Bush is not talking about, the Dems will point out that Bush is overlooking, not caring, etc.
That or a Minuteman out of Minot.
Isn't billy boy just a supremo piglet?
I must have missed it, so tell me again: Why should a disease resulting from life style choices get special emphasis?
(I'm sure its not because of special interest politics... )
This guy is so irrelevant. Ho-hum.
What else would one expect from a Democrat, and especially the Slickmeister? The action in Afghanistan is the United States protecting itself against its enemies and is a legitimate use of federal power. The AIDS epidemic is the most avoidable epidemic in human history, and could be ended if people exercised self-control and resonsibility for their own actions - but since they won't, Clinton feels it is the responsibility of government to save them from their own folly. Talk about a completely skewed value system...
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