The End of Ryan White in Cali?
June 2, 2009 by James
Ryan White wasn’t from California, and only visited a few times as far as I can ascertain. However, he was here in 1990, just before his death. He came to host a post-Oscars with none other than legendary AIDS heroes, the Reagans. Yup, one of his last public appearances came with the man whose legacy on the HIV/AIDS crisis was well summarized by Allen White in the SF Chronicle a few years ago as “Silence Equals Death.”
But while California had a long history of queer activism on AIDS, including the founding of two of the earliest AIDS-focused organizations in 1982, the San Francisco AIDS Foundation and the AIDS Project Los Angeles. It was Ryan White, a boy-next-door kind of kid that made Congress stop simply averting their eyes to the crisis that was occurring. And just four months after White’s death, the Ryan White CARE Act was signed. While White’s story was just one of many reasons for the passage of what has become a monumentally important piece of legislation to the many AIDS patients across the country, his story broke the mold of thinking that AIDS was merely isolated to one community. Incidentally, AVERT, an international HIV and AIDS charity based in the UK, has a great web section on the history and science of the AIDS crisis.
Yet, today, amidst the budget crisis, we are now facing the end of the Ryan White Legacy. In the latest budget proposals, state AIDS funding is in danger of being completely eliminated.
Read more at: Calitics!




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