
October 2005 Cover
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At the recent meeting of the National Association of Black Journalists in Atlanta, members debated whether coverage of men living on the "down low"-- engaging in relationships with women while secretly having sex with
men-- is a public service or a salacious distraction from other issues-- such as unemployment, education, and homophobia-- facing the black community. Often, media coverage of bisexual black men is accompanied by
statistics showing the rise of HIV in the black community. Though they account for just 12 percent of the US population, African Americans comprise 54 percent of annual new HIV infections.
"We have missed the mark by focusing on AIDS and by demonizing black men," said
Wall Street Journal reporter Steven Gray. "I think it created a bogeyman for black women without proper context." Some critics
charge the "down low" hype has prompted some black women to conduct "witch hunts" to determine whether the men in their lives are secretly bisexual.
But living on the "down low" is not exclusive to the black community, some gays pointed out, and white men have long been engaging in similar behaviors, as evidenced by the recent coming-out of then-governor
James McGreevey of New Jersey.
Editor's Note: from the Atlanta Journal-Constitution
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