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Wednesday, July 02, 2008
Robert Knight :: Townhall.com Columnist
Post Tells the Truth on 'Safe Sex' -- Then Ignores It
by Robert Knight
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“We understand that casual sex is dear to you, but staying alive is dear to us.”

The Washington Post provided a rare service on Monday, shining light on an unfolding scandal of deadly political correctness in Uganda.

The quote above is from “Let My People Go, AIDS Profiteers,” an op-ed column in the Post by the Rev. Sam L. Ruteikara, co-chair of Uganda’s National AIDS-Prevention Committee.

Ruteikara details how Uganda’s successful ABC campaign (Abstinence, Be Faithful, Condoms as a last resort) recorded huge advances in reducing infections from 1991 through 2002, but was subverted by an AIDS establishment that dislikes Uganda’s emphasis on marriage and faithfulness.

HIV rates plunged from 21 percent in 1991 to 6 percent in 2002 in Uganda during the stricken nation’s campaign to restore traditional morality. Meanwhile, as Western nations dropped more than 2 billion condoms on Africa, other nations suffered an unabated epidemic. Uganda stuck out as the grand exception.

While the media largely ignored this singular success story, AIDS bureaucrats, furious at this living rebuke to their condom-based campaigns, worked to bring Uganda into the “safe-sex” fold.

In March 2007, Washington Post writer Craig Timberg in “Uganda’s Early Gains Against HIV Eroding” described how the initial, “fear”-based approach, which yielded impressive results in the early ’90s, gave way to the more typical condom-based approach in Uganda. He quotes Sam Okware, “a top Ugandan health official who designed early, frightening anti-AIDS campaigns. ‘It has adapted too much to international guidelines instead of sticking to our own methods, which were very controversial at first but which worked.’”

In his June 30 column, Ruteikara relates, “I have seen the process sabotaged. Repeatedly, our 25-member prevention committee put faithfulness and abstinence into the National Strategic Plan that guides how PEPFAR [President’s Emergency Plan for HIV-AIDS Relief] money for our country will be spent. Repeatedly, foreign advisers erased our recommendations. When the document draft was published, fidelity and abstinence were missing.”

It gets worse:  “And somehow, a suspicious statistic attacking marriage appeared. The plan states that the HIV infection rate among married couples is 42 percent, twice as high as the rate among prostitutes. …in fact, the 2004-05 Ugandan HIV/AIDS Sero-Behaviorial Survey found that HIV prevalence among married couples is only 6.3 percent…. As fidelity and abstinence have been subverted, Uganda’s HIV rates have begun to tick back up.”

Now, shouldn’t this be a major news story? Billions of dollars, not to mention millions of lives, are at stake, and someone is committing outright fraud?

But you’ll search in vain for a media story about this. In fact, directly opposite the column, over on the editorial page, a Post editorial peddles the same old “safe-sex” medicine to young, homosexual men in America.

In “A Persistent Scourge: HIV-AIDS continues to ensnare young gay men,” the Post sounds the alarm with recent CDC stats showing a 12 percent rise in HIV infections among 13-to-24-year-old males, and between 2001 and 2006, a 22 percent increase among black men who have sex with men. The Post says these grim stats are “a reminder that the work of keeping people HIV-negative and getting those who are HIV-positive into treatment is never done.” Continued...

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About The Author

Robert Knight is director of the Culture & Media Institute at the Media Research Center.

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Subject: Six Stars
You hit it directly upon the head when you quoted Rev. Ruteikara. Liberals are all about preserving casual sex at any cost. Consequences be damned. Who cares about the physical, mental, spiritual, and emotional causalties. Create a government bureaucracy to combat the consequences instead of curing the disease.
Sex is great but can leave you feeling empty at the least and dead at the worst. Sex in a commited, caring, loving, and nurturing relationship called marriage is heavenly.

Thank you Buster, etc.
Thank you for your reasonable response to the general hetrosexism (I dislike the term homophobia, I don't think these people are afraid of homosexuals, but I know they think that hetrosexuality is superior to the degree that discrimination against homosexuals is acceptable) seen here at Townhall.

I am a homosexual and I am committed to upholding the values and culture of the United States of America--I just don't think those two things are mutually exclusive.

I am firmly for encouraging children to postpone sexual activity until they are married but you have to teach them about biology, desire, social coping strategies, and contraception as well. Teaching children that sex is evil, which is what I learned when young, is counterproductive. The girls still had sex, they just lived in denial (they didn't talk about it and tried not to even think about it) which meant they didn't use any precautions. A majority of the girls in my small church got pregnant before they graduated high school and ended up single parents. Enocuraging responsible decision making is the only way to help the problem. Fear has it's place in that--but it should be the fear of having a child and messsing up the lives of everyone involved not the fear of sex.

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