by Tyler_JC » Fri 08 Jun 2007, 14:05:20
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('dukey', 'i')f HIV did cause aids
it would have spread like any other infectous disease rather than staying in the original risk groups (ie gays)
Prostitutes would have spread it like crazy .. One of my friends got something like gonorrhea in his mouth from going down on a Thai prostitute,, they dont use protection. Why don't we ever hear about aids from these places?
and 'apparantly' it can take a long time for 'aids' to develop when you get HIV. So if this was really true, millions and millions of people would have caught HIV and not known, then we would have had a huge outbreak in both males and females ! (Lots of these gay men are also bisexual). This just hasn't happened.
And how is what people call AIDs in africa any different to people just having poor immune systems due to lack of nutritiun, clean water etc, then just dying of any old disease. Why is AIDs in africa 50:50 male female. When in the western world it's strictly gay men. How can that possibly be the same disease ? Can you name 1 .. other disease like that. Just one ...
How can we possibly help these people in Africa with drugs ? when the reason they are probably in such a poor state is the obvious, no clean water, no good nutritiun, general lack of sanitation etc etc. How can drugs, which some of them are so toxic they have been proven to kill, help people in this country which already have weak immune systems ? Is the western world just killing off Africans with 'vaccine' and 'aids' drugs programs ? I think yes.
1. We do hear about hookers with AIDS. We hear about it all the time.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prostituti ... HIV.2FAIDS
"The prevalence of HIV/AIDS in Thailand, and especially among sex workers, has been the subject of significant media and academic attention, and Thailand hosted the XV International AIDS Conference, 2004.
Mechai Viravaidya, known as "Mr. Condom", has campaigned tirelessly to increase the awareness of safe sex practices and use of condoms in Thailand. He served as minister for tourism and AIDS prevention from 1991 to 1992; he also founded the restaurant chain Cabbages and Condoms. After the enactment of the Thai government's first five-year plan to combat the HIV/AIDS epidemic in the country, including Mechai's "100% condom program", the use of condoms during commercial sex has jumped markedly, to 90%. The program instructs sex workers to refuse intercourse without condom, and monitors health clinic statistics in order to locate brothels that allow sex without condoms
Thailand was praised for its efforts in the fight against HIV/AIDS during the late 1990s, but a study in 2005 found that the lack of public support in the previous several years had led to a resurgence of the disease.[9]"
2. In the western world, it is NOT just gay men.
"AIDS cases in 2003 in the United States,
48% were tracked back to male-to-male contact
27% were tracked back to male-to-female contact and intravenous drug use,
7% were tracked back to male-to-male contact and intravenous drug use,
16% tracked back to male-to-female contact
2% were tracked back to other causes, including hemophilia and other blood recipients, perinatal, and risk not reported or not identified"
Estimated per act risk for acquisition of HIV by exposure route
Exposure Route Estimated infections per 10,000 exposures to an infected source
Blood Transfusion 9,000
Childbirth 2,500
Needle-sharing injection drug use 67
Receptive anal intercourse* 50
Percutaneous needle stick 30
Receptive penile-vaginal intercourse* 10
Insertive anal intercourse* 6.5
Insertive penile-vaginal intercourse* 5
Receptive oral intercourse* 1
Insertive oral intercourse* 0.5
Naturally, gay men will have a higher probablity of catching the disease based on their sexual practices.
We don't hear about blood transfusion-borne AIDS as much anymore because the Red Cross screens out anyone who might even possibly have HIV/AIDS from the pool of donors.
AIDS is a blood disease, not an air-borne infection. That's why everyone hasn't been infected yet.
In Africa, no one uses protection and thus, the disease spreads rampantly.
In America, many people (and nearly everyone with HIV) use condoms. Therefore, we can retard the spread of the illness. Safe sex practices DO reduce the chance of transmission dramatically.