I think that to have any meaningful discussion we have to agree on the definition of effective. Does effective to you mean 100% absolute guarantee of protection? If so, we are on different wavelengths because very few things in this world are 100% effective (that, incidentally does not make them ineffective, a term which means having no effect at all).
Strictly speaking, even abstinence cannot be said to be 100% effective in preventing HIV, because a virgin can receive a transfusion or needlestick injury (a not uncommon occurrence) and be placed at risk of acquiring the infection.
With regards to the chlorination of water, I have not done research on the topic, so I’m not in a position to discuss it - though I will be enlightening myself in that regard.
Incidentally, does it bother you that I refer both to oppressed wives and equal partners? They are just put forward as practical scenarios where the principles we are discussing are being applied on a daily basis. The marital state spans a wide spectrum of relationship types and living arrangements, so it’s pertinent that discussion of marital issues look at some real life situations.
Yes, I do find it bothersome that you present a scenario of rape, or at least oppressive cultures.
I find that ofering assistance for the conclusion of the problem tends to feed the problem. Of course, what might be our difference on this thread is our idea of “the problem.”
For example, in India, HIV is rampant to such a point that many scientists worry the country will hit a point of no return. What is the actual problem? Men are culturally allowed to use prostitutes and their wives are not to ask who it was or for the men to be tested. This is particularly easy to see in the field of trucking, where a man will engage in sexual intercourse at several different stops along the way before going home to be with his wife. Now, his wife is not allowed to refuse him nor ask him to use a condom.
When I watched this documented study and then did some independent research, I came to the conclusion that India had a major problem. The wives are required to be sex slaves and are not allowed to ask their husbands anything. The men are allowed to use women at every sexual opportunity. To me, obviously this was a problem of legal and social inequality.
Of course, everyone else I have heard from who has seen this documentary decided the problem was this: India needs lots of condoms. I think Bill Gate agrees, too.
It really is beyond me why anyone would seek to completely ignore the plight of humans being subjected, abused and raped for the satisfaction of a stronger human being, and I had hoped to learn more from you about why such a position is popular, but I still have not found any answers.
Oh, the examples are so numerous, why stop at one impoverished country? The abortion example is quite interesting as well. Again, you have a disagreement over what the problem really
is. I would say the problem is a proven income gap, poor education, poor support system and inequality. And yet, apparently the problem is the conceived child. Like they say, a poor, abused woman after an abortion is just a poor, abused mother of a dead baby.
It doesn’t make much sense to me. If a woman does manage to successfully convince her partner to wear a condom and it successfully deters the spread of disease for that sexual encounter, she was still raped, used against her will or made to be subjected to a man’s desire above her own value and health.
Furthermore, I would go on to argue that those who provide oppressive countries or governments with condoms are enabling the abuse of women in that country. In fact, with the marketing strategies employed that make even you believe an 85% chance against HIV is **effective, **men will see the added benefit and engage in more and riskier behavior.
Planned Parenthood will hide cases of incest and rape and kill the big shred of evidence: the child. This does, of course, greatly support the perpetrator and not the victim. So, too, will condoms generate a sense of false security and safety for the perpetrator in cases of oppression and rape.
Short sighted ideals typically want to focus on the results, but 70-85% effective when used 100% correctly means 15-30% of the time it fails. When you are talking about permanent, expensive diseases, calling condoms effective is quite an astonishing position to hold.