Breaking News
Loading...
Wednesday 9 May 2012

Info Post
With all due respect to Wesley Snipes, one should never bet on Black. At least if you live in Atlanta and are "winked" at by a Black chick on eHarmony or Match, or happen to find yourself in a bar and being eyed by a Nubian American Princess -- drop your drink and run:
Odds are high those four on the right...
ATLANTA -- 11Alive News is sounding the alarm. 
Research shows African-American women, many living in Atlanta, are being infected with HIV -- so much so that the new cases are being compared to African countries.

Data collected in 2009 from the health departments in Clayton, Fulton, DeKalb, Cobb, Douglas and Gwinnett counties indicates infection rates of HIV and AIDS, respectively, as follows: (This is for women and men combined, all races.)
Fulton: 4,213 and 7,342

DeKalb: 3,257 and 3,983

Clayton: 847 and 943

Cobb and Douglas: 1,030 and 1,288

Gwinnett: 884 and 1,041 
In another study conducted by the Centers for Disease Control, black women make up 60 percent of all new HIV cases among women. That's 15 times higher than white women and four percent higher than Hispanic women. 
But studies also show black women are no more likely than women of other races to engage in risky behaviors. 
So what's the problem? We went searching for some answers. 
"I sat back and it's like he stole my life," said Terri Gardner of Cartersville. "I wanted him dead." Why? "Because now -- you have not only taken my life. Who wants somebody that's HIV positive?" 
Gardner, 55, said she was robbed by the man she says infected her with HIV.
"He had my heart and it seems like he just got it and did what he wanted to do and that's what he did," said the mother of four, adding that it all came as a surprise.
"I didn't even know when I got infected," Gardner said.

Rates that rival that of African countries? Imagine that... in the Black Mecca of America.

Black people truly are responsible for being incubators for sexually transmitted diseases. Never bet on black.

Never.




0 comments:

Post a Comment