tv 1980s AIDS Crisis CSPAN March 2, 2019 7:30pm-7:44pm EST
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aids often faced discrimination in housing, jobs and seeking medical treatment. she outlined some of the protections later provided in the americans with disabilities act. this 12 minute interview was recorded in chicago at the american historical association annual meeting. >> nancy brown, when did aids rise to the national consciousness? >> it first came to public attention in 1981 with a few articles in the "new york times" and other places. there were reports of homosexual men who had some strange types of cancer and pneumonia. 1982 there were a few more reports and at the end of 1982, there were reports that it had been seen in infants and also there was some discussion about it was in the blood bank. 1913 was really the big year this was in the headlines and that was the year that the real phobia about aids began because
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all of a sudden people understood that it was in the blood bank and women were getting it, hemophiliacs were getting it. it was the first public fear about aids. >> what is it and what have we learned since the diagnosis first became public in the 1980's? >> that's a big question. aids is a retrovirus and you get it through sexual contact or like blood transfusions or i.v. drug use. it's blood contact to blood contact. it is a virus that infects the t- cells your helper t- cells are what direct your body's immune system. so when they're gone, your body doesn't know what to do when it's confronted. aids itself is what destroys your body's immune system and pen people die from the opportunistic infections. so in the beginning, people with
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aids got sarcoma and pneumonia. those were the marketing that there were a hold round of fungus infections, pair citic infections people lost weight. we talk about aids it's the final stage of the body's failure to respond to infection. since then there has been, you know, it was in 1983-1984 they discovered it was viral. before that, they didn't know and since then they have developed different treatments so in 1987 was the first treatment and that was the a.z.t. what happens was people's bodies became resistant to the medicine. 1985 then you had the idea of this cocktail, that there were three to four different medicines that people would take
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at the same time and they all addressed different parts of the virus reproduction cycle and that is still where people are. there are some new medications that people can take post-sexual contact, there are medications people can take before sexual contact and of course people are still encouraged to use condoms, so what we have learned, there are all sorts of things of where the virus came from. we haven't learned a vaccine for the virus and there still is not a cure but they are getting to the point where people's viral loads are so low that they can't be detected. there is hope that there is a chance that there may be a permanent treatment in the future. >> ronald reagan and the white house at the time, what kind of grade would you give his administration in dealing with the issue early on? >> ronald reagan himself didn't speak about aids, didn't say the word aids until i think 1987.
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and there was a real lack of quick reaction in terms of funding and providing assistance to people who had aids. i think it was -- it was all part of, it was also happening at the time of recession. it was happening at the time the reagan administration was trying to pull back some of the programs for healthcare. so altogether, that result indeed a very slow uptake of what can we do to help people with aids and what we can do about the virus. >> one of the ironies, one of his friends, rock hudson, died from aids. did that impact his thinking? >> i don't personally know the impact of his thinking. i know nancy reagan became very involved with, like in the later 1980's and befriended ryan white who was a teenager who got aids, so i don't think he ever came
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out in strong support of, with increased funding and a public voice, but you know, his second term was coming to an end, he was more outspoken about it. >> when did we begin to turn the tide in terms of public awareness, education, letting those who conducted that type of activity to avoid it and also the research and medication? >> that's a big question, too. i'm going to kind of stick a little bit in the 1980's and 1990's. so in terms of medication, you had 1987 was the a.z.t. and 1995 was the cocktail. the funding for education in the 1980's was problematic because there was a difference in what the -- there were some reports there was a public mailing about how to avoid getting aids, but in terms of the people who are actually more likely to get aids, gay men, i.v. drug users,
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there was a real resistance to getting them information that was helpful for them and the idea was, you didn't want to encourage that behavior or activity, so you would talk around the issue and not be direct about what needed to be done. in 1987 jesse helms introduced an amendment it was called the no promo homo, so any education couldn't be concerned for homo sexuality. in the late 1980's a turn in public opinion and a sympathy for people who are aids. that's the turn in the bush early years. you still have difficulty educating people and wanting to confront what the issues are that cause people to be i.v. drug users and how do you get
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them clean bills and is that acceptable. so there is still a lot of issues around aids education. >> your paper, explain. >> i'm looking at aids as a disability and how that was a key to turning the tide towards protecting people with aids from discrimination. so one of the points i'm looking at in my paper at the conference is what happened in new york city. so new york city they had human rights laws that were more expansive than the federal laws. so it protected people in housing, employment accommodation. as a disability, somebody who was discriminated because they had aids could go to this legislation, they could go to the human rights commission of new york city and new york state and file a complaint and have it investigated and potentially get their job back or get help with
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housing. the commissions looked at funeral homes and looked at hospitals, so that was, i kind of look at that line about how being disabled gave people with aids some civil rights that they didn't have. >> and how do you research the other part of that component, those with physical disabilities as part of the a.d.a.? >> because there were a couple of organizations, like the leadership conference on civil rights and it included the members, national gay task force, human rights campaign fund, gay rights national lobby and also campaign for the disability rights and defense fund and a couple of other disability rights organizations. so they came together and when it came time for the civil rights restoration act, the fair housing amendment act and the americans with disability act, there was a push to carve out aids.
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so these were going to protect people with disabilities, but some of the conservative and religious organizations wanted to carve out aids and say but not people with aids. this is where they all came together and stood behind people with aids and said no, we're not going to let it carve out. the whole idea was the americans with disabilities act, it was the fear of people with disabilities discrimination of people with disabilities. at that point they knew that aids wasn't contagious with casual contact. somebody being fired that they were contagious wasn't acceptable. >> all of this part of your doctoral dissertation? >> yes, i look at social security new york city, the civil rights restoration act and the americans with disability act and kind of how that
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strained to be disabled was to have more rights than somebody that was gay and lesbian and in new york city, that changed people's opinions about why are we protecting people with aids and yet it's ok to fire somebody who is gay or it's ok to evict somebody who is a lesbian. >> we should point out, you are studying at purdue university. >> yes. >> i remember "newsweek" and "time magazine" cover stories, the aids crisis in the 1980's. >> that was 1983. >> is it still a crisis today? >> if you think of people dying quick deaths, no. if you look worldwide, it is still a crisis. in 2017 over, not over, but close to a million people died of aids. there is still pockets of, in indiana there was a city that had a small population of i.v. drug users that all got infected with aids. so i would say there is still a large number of people who have
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it worldwide. there are people dying from it. we still don't have drug treatment. so i would say the crisis has changed, but i think it's still a crisis. >> and are we more tolerant of gays and lesbians today than we were in the 1970's and 1980's? >> i think many people are. i think it's still a point of contention and in new york city, they did a gay and lesbian discrimination documentation project in the 1980's. when you read it, it's horrifying the number of people who were assaulted on the streets, the number of people who were kicked out of their apartments, lost their jobs, arrested and all sorts of things like that. i don't think it's that obvious anymore, but i think it's still people who feel that it's a moral issue so i think there is
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still a ways to go. >> and finally, nancy brown, why did you gravitate to this issue to these issues really? >> that is a little bit of a long story. i came to purdue to study german immigrants. >> quite a contrast. >> i'm doing my prelims, you're getting to write your dissertation. a professor said why don't you do ryan white. i thought that's a good topic for me. i had a child with some educational difficulties, we went through due process experience, ryan white, that's a topic. once i started getting into it it just became a very passionate topic for me and so i went from a class to a new dissertation. >> we thank you for your time. >> thank you. announcer: you're watching american history tv only on
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c-span 3. nasa's opportunity rover explored the surface of mars for 15 years until communications ceased in 2018. the information gathered will be used to plan for future manned trips to the planet. this nasa mission was carried out by engineers at the jet propulsion laboratory in pasadena. we'll visit the facility to learn about its origins and the ongoing mission to better understand the universe. >> you are a place that we actually called the center of the universe. you might come across as a little bit egotistical, but this is the original mission control for j.p.l. and here at j.p.l. jet propulsion laboratory, we have explored all of the solar system and we're paving the way for human exploration elsewhere in the solar system. and, of course
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