A
AlanFromWichita
Guest
Imagine that. The age-old advice still reigns: follow the money.It’s a scam headed up by the U.N. (sterilization of undesiribles) and pharmaceutical companies (money).
Imagine that. The age-old advice still reigns: follow the money.It’s a scam headed up by the U.N. (sterilization of undesiribles) and pharmaceutical companies (money).
Boy, if you have a source for that, I’d sure like to get hold of it! It would be worth its weight in gold.Heh, psst let me tell you a secret.
Most of that in Africa isn’t AIDS. Nope, not at all.
It’s from drinking tainted water, yup.
Here is how they define AIDS there: “prolonged fevers for a month or more, weight loss of over 10% and prolonged diarrhoea.”
Yea, not testing. It’s not AIDS, most likely TB or various waterborne parasites.
It’s a scam headed up by the U.N. (sterilization of undesiribles) and pharmaceutical companies (money).
The horse’s mouthBoy, if you have a source for that, I’d sure like to get hold of it! It would be worth its weight in gold.
This is an important point. I read a few years ago that using condoms to stop AIDS is virtually pointless. The AIDS virus is microscopic and can easily travel straight through the holes in latex. People aren’t afflicted with this disease because they listened to the Church and didn’t use a condom, but because they didn’t listen to the Church and used drugs or engaged in sex outside of marriage or as homosexuals.It is a myth that the spread of AIDS is due to those following the Church and not using condoms. We all know that obviously, these people are not following the churches rules on abstinance before marriage.
In Zimbawee, condoms are sold in the stores, freely accessible to everyone. Still, AIDS is rampant. Condoms are not reliable.
I am proud of the Catholic Churchs stance on no contracetives.
“Trying to stop AIDS with condoms is like trying to end murder with a bullet proof vest”.
He goes on to explain in detail how the media distorted percentages and misrepresented the epidemic in order to get all of us worked up about AIDS.It didn’t take long before the scientists discovered that HIV, the AIDS virus, was carried in blood and semen. That explained why its victims were mainly gay men who engaged in high-risk anal sex and junkies who shot drugs into their veins and shared “dirty” needles. In the early days, some got the disease from blood transfusions. Hemophiliacs were especially at risk.
By any imaginable standard, this should have been bad enough. These were human beings dying terrible deaths. What could be worse?
How about the possibility that this virus that was picking off junkies and gay men might start to spread to housewives in Des Moines and businessmen in Seattle?
How about the possibility that before long it wouldn’t just be homosexual men at gay bars whowould have to wonder if their next partner would be the one with the deadly virus? What if everyone who was having sex was playing Russian roulette?
I’ve heard this before too, but I have to think this is a red herring. The issue is not one of the size of a virus versus the size of the pores in latex. The bigger problems are improper use, mechanical failure, and manufacturing defects (e.g. pinholes, tears), which happen all the time.This is an important point. I read a few years ago that using condoms to stop AIDS is virtually pointless. The AIDS virus is microscopic and can easily travel straight through the holes in latex.
I believe that is exactly the right attitude to take.that is interesting, Bobby!
I am very grateful that when I was living a sinful life I did not contract aids. Now that I am fully reconciled to the Church I do not have to be concerned that I would contract aids from sexual conduct. If I marry, and I contract aids from the man I marry, it would break my heart - however, I would have to believe that there was a reason for my contracting the virus when living a virtuous life when my Lord spared me from the virus when I was living a sinful life. I guess what I am trying to say is, I cannot blame the Church if I chose to live a sinful life and I must trust Jesus if, when living within the parameters of my faith, bad things happen to me.
Does any of what I am saying make any sense to anyone but me?
:whacky:
So does that mean that condoms actually fail more than 17% becauseThey’re not even that good.
I remember from my public school sex-ed classes that condoms have a real-world failure rate against pregnancy that is as high as 17%. We all hear about the optimal failure rate as being 1 or 2%, but we don’t live in an optimal world. We live in the real world.
Now, if a woman is only fertile about 5 days out of the month, and the condom failure rate based on those five days alone is upwards of 17%, what does that imply about the failure rate against a disease that can be contracted every day of the month?
You do the math.
Both are true. Condoms fail a LOT more than 17%. We just notice those particular failures.So does that mean that condoms actually fail more than 17% because
a. A woman is only fertile 5 days a month (so it would have to fail during that time for her to become pregnant)
b. A woman may not get pregnant every time she is fertile
???