Grace & Peace!
Of course, Vern.
Your own data shows that if you use condoms they will eventually fail. Over a prolonged period of time, if the individual continues have sex, your own data shows he will eventually have “unprotected” sex as a result of condom failure.
And convincing people they are “safe” at the failure rates you cited is clearly counter-productive. People are encouraged to keep on doing what they do by “experts” who bloody well know the failure rate of condoms.
Context, Vern.
I’ll rephrase the request: show me how condoms are
more ineffective and
more counter-productive compared with doing nothing at all, throwing up your hands, or merely telling people they should behave (or what’s even more ineffectual, that they
should have behaved some time in the past). I think your reticence to answer the question is indicative of your inability to do so. You can equivocate just fine and resort to your own brand of sophistry, but answer the question you cannot.
A few additional things, Vern. Your complaint re: the term “safe sex” is well noted, and I agree that it implies 100% safety and, as such, is potentially disingenuous and not as clear as it should be. Note, please, that I have not once advocated telling anyone that sex with a condom is risk free (show me where I did). I have been arguing that compared to no protection at all, condoms decrease dramatically the risk of exposure to HIV. Furthermore, I have been arguing for condom advocacy coupled with education aimed towards abstinence. You will also note that I’ve not been talking about advocating the use of the phrase “safe sex”–I’ve been advocating the use of “safer sex”, which you may see as merely semantic, but it
is different and
does indeed make the point which you’re making. (At least it did to me when I heard it oh so many years ago.) Finally your first paragraph above with your reference to a “prolonged period of time” suggests that you think we’re talking about sex addicts and the incredibly promiscuous exclusively–of course such people will be exposed to more risk than others.
So is your argument that because no method, apart from abstinence, is 100% effective against HIV, we should therefore *not *advocate for *proven risk reducing *measures to be taken for those who will have sex anyway? If you’re in a car with someone, do you prevent them from buckling up because, while safety belts save lives, they do not save all lives all the time and are not 100% effective against fatalities in the event of an accident? I hope you
do prevent others from buckling up, if only for the sake of consistency.
I guess I’m somewhat unwilling to believe that your adamant refusal to recognize the benefits of condom use (however limited they are, it’s more protection than nothing at all and is proven to reduce risk of infection), is predicated merely on semantics: all your disagreement hinges on the phrase “safe sex,” which we both agree is misleading?
So, anyway, let’s not pretend that you’re talking to a “safe sex” advocate. Let’s pretend you’re talking to someone who absolutely agrees with you re: your “safe sex” point, but who, for the moment, sees your harping on the “safe sex” point (given the agreement on the same) as a form of evasion. Let’s say this person has said the following:
“A more truthful message would be: “Despite other messages to the contrary, it is risky to have promiscuous sex, with or without a condom. But sex with a condom greatly and considerably reduces your risks of exposure to HIV, while sex without a condom is virtually begging for infection. Educate yourself. Explore abstinence. Explore monogamy.””
How do you respond to such a statement? It’s clear about risks involved, there is no deception–it states that sex with a condom remains risky, but that condom use reduces risk of infection (it does not say it eliminates it). Recognizing that it is not a general “Safe sex” statement and that your objections to that term have no real applicability in this context–what are your problems with this statement?
And the failure rate is exacerbated by the conditions under which condoms are used – in conjunction with drugs and alcohol. But of course the “safe sex” people wash their hands of that. Having encouraged the user to believe they are “safe,” they blame the user for the results!!
I guarantee you that condoms are not used exclusively under conditions of alcohol or substance abuse. (Are you just making this stuff up, Vern?) In fact, condoms are used
less frequently in conjunction with drugs and alcohol–hence the greater risks involved. I’ll dig up some statistics if you like.
Also, who are the “Safe sex people”, Vern? Let’s try to be clearer about who we’re talking about. If you have a beef with a particular group or cabal of groups, why not take it up with them?
Have you ever taken a walk through Chelsea in NYC? You’d learn quickly enough that trying to hook people up with resources for the treatment of substance abuse goes hand in hand with HIV prevention tactics. Ultimately, people can only do so much, but the healthworkers I know and have known belie your hideously callous characterization of them.
I would argue that it is not the healthworkers that are being callous or irresponsible. There are those who advocate doing nothing but throwing up their hands and saying, “the genie’s out of the bottle”; people who, in their self-righteous despair, provide no real useful solutions to the practical realities of the crisis, primarily, it seems, for semantic reasons.
Under the Mercy,
Mark
Deo Gratias!