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The Bush legacy

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President Bush cemented his own legacy this week, signing into law a dramatic expansion of his already unprecedented effort against AIDS in Africa and other desperate regions. His program is saving literally millions of lives, and it will stand as his greatest bipartisan foreign policy achievement.

Approved with lopsided majorities by the House in April and the Senate last month, Bush signed the bill on Wednesday. It authorizes spending $48 billion over the next five years to fight AIDS, tuberculosis and malaria — the three diseases of poverty — in the areas of the world that most need help.

The $48 billion represents a more than threefold expansion of the program that Bush first announced in his State of the Union address in 2003 and was approved by Congress later that year.

At the time, the Bush initiative was overshadowed in the headlines by the nation's focus on Iraq and the economy, despite the fact that the original $15 billion initiative was the largest commitment ever by any nation for a global battle against a single disease.

Five years later, the new initiative is again overshadowed, and again by the focus on the economy and Iraq.

And — for Bush, at least — that is a shame.

In 2003, just 50,000 of the millions of people infected with the AIDS virus in all of sub-Saharan Africa were receiving life-saving antiretroviral drugs.

Today, 1.7 million Africans are receiving the drugs, and the program is supporting care for nearly 7 million, including 2.7 million children orphaned by AIDS. In Haiti, one of the poorest nations on the planet, barely 100 people were receiving the drugs in 2003; now 13,000 are treated.

With less than six months remaining in the Bush presidency, the rest of his legacy remains at best cloudy. But the impressive results of his battle against the scourge of AIDS cannot be denied. Its impact, in real lives saved, will be felt for many years to come.

REPRINTED FROM THE SAN DIEGO UNION-TRIBUNE.

DISTRIBUTED BY CREATORS SYNDICATE, INC.


Comments

2 Comments | Post Comment
Professor Sowell, your slavish admiration of rich people and their political lapdogs has long since disqualified you as a serious voice in political discourse. You're such a knee-jerk reactionary that your opinions are thoroughly predictable as soon as the subject is identified. You remind me of Tina Fay's send up of Sarah Palin about how to fix the economy: "Well, we'll just figure out what a maverick would do, and then we'll do that." On any issue, your way of deciding seems to be, "Well, I just figure out the opinion of Jim Inhofe or Saxby Chambliss or John Cornyn, and that's my opinion." Regrettably, your unusual status as a prestigious African-American cheerleader for Social Darwinism gives you undeserved credibility with angry people like Clarence Thomas. His splenetic autobiography must have made you really proud. Your desire to polish the legacy of the worst U.S. president ever is certainly understandable, given your seething hatred of his successor and the way you have tarnished your own legacy by consistently viewing history through the distorted prism of plutocracy.
Comment: #1
Posted by: Mike Milligan
Mon Jan 19, 2009 2:15 PM
Dr. Sowell I applaud you so very much for this article. Never have I read something that has said closer to what was on my mind than this. Finally something that can get people to actually think about why they hate President Bush so much. That's all I see and hear day in and day out in the last several years is how badly he's been president when no one ever talks about the positive things he's done. It was really comforting in reading these words coming from someone as distinguished and successful as yourself.
Comment: #2
Posted by: Preston
Tue Jan 20, 2009 2:11 PM
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