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	<title>The Wisdom of Whores &#187; Politically correct</title>
	<atom:link href="http://www.wisdomofwhores.com/tag/politically-correct/feed/" rel="self" type="application/rss+xml" />
	<link>http://www.wisdomofwhores.com</link>
	<description>Of sex and science. Elizabeth Pisani's blog about HIV and other sundry things.</description>
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		<title>Keep it up: now for the Muslims</title>
		<link>http://www.wisdomofwhores.com/2008/12/28/keep-it-up-now-for-the-muslims/</link>
		<comments>http://www.wisdomofwhores.com/2008/12/28/keep-it-up-now-for-the-muslims/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 28 Dec 2008 11:47:29 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>elizabeth</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Good sex and bad]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Afghanistan]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Politically correct]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[viagra]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.wisdomofwhores.com/?p=1321</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[In this season of giving, it&#8217;s important to be an equal-opportunities purveyor of cheer. So I give you the CIA&#8217;s latest ploy in Afghanistan: the spooks are swapping Viagra for intelligence. They&#8217;re not just handing out these prescription meds to anyone, of course. That would be irresponsible. But they did note that one particularly uncoperative [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>In this season of giving, it&#8217;s important to be an equal-opportunities purveyor of cheer. So I give you the CIA&#8217;s latest ploy in Afghanistan: the spooks are swapping Viagra for intelligence.</p>
<p>They&#8217;re not just handing out these prescription meds to anyone, of course. That would be irresponsible. But they did note that one particularly uncoperative warlord of about 60 had four young wives, according to <a href="http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2008/12/25/AR2008122500931.html">The Washington Post</a>. What could a man in that position possibly need? The CIA knowingly proffered blue pills. </p>
<blockquote><p>&#8220;The enticement worked. The officer, who described the encounter, returned four days later to an enthusiastic reception. The grinning chief offered up a bonanza of information about Taliban movements and supply routes &#8212; followed by a request for more pills&#8230;.Aging village patriarchs were easily sold on the utility of a pill that could &#8220;put them back in an authoritative position,&#8221; the official said.
</p></blockquote>
<p>Sharp-eyed (and sour-faced) readers spotted the fact that this story was <a href="http://oxdown.firedoglake.com/diary/2671">juxtaposed with another about the exploitation of women around the world,</a> and they quickly joined the dots. Giving Viagra to men over 60 is, apparently, America&#8217;s way of &#8220;provid(ing) another method for these guys to oppress women and children in their own country&#8221;. Which is, yet again, to assume that none of the wives could possibly want to have sex with their husband. Ho hum. I&#8217;d rather share my friend Steve&#8217;s more seasonably charitable view of the story: Alhamdulillah! </p>
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		<slash:comments>2</slash:comments>
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		<title>Strange bedfellows: feminists, fundamentalists and orgasms</title>
		<link>http://www.wisdomofwhores.com/2008/07/08/strange-bedfellows-feminists-fundamentalists-and-orgasms/</link>
		<comments>http://www.wisdomofwhores.com/2008/07/08/strange-bedfellows-feminists-fundamentalists-and-orgasms/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 08 Jul 2008 15:34:42 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>elizabeth</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Good sex and bad]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Ideology and HIV]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Abstinence]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[PEPFAR]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Politically correct]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Religious Right]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.wisdomofwhores.com/?p=436</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[One of the things I noticed on the left hand side of the Atlantic was how many people took the dust jacket off my book before taking it out in public. No one wants to be seen in the company of &#8220;Whores&#8221; on the subway. But who is the word offending? Both left and right, [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>One of the things I noticed on the left hand side of the Atlantic was how many people took the dust jacket off my book before taking it out in public. No one wants to be seen in the company of &#8220;Whores&#8221;  on the subway. But who is the word offending? Both left and right, it seems.</p>
<p>Check out <a href="http://www.salon.com/books/review/2008/07/08/sex_in_crisis/index.html">&#8220;Jesus loves you &#8212; and your orgasm&#8221;</a>, Salon&#8217;s review of Dagmar Herzog&#8217;s book &#8220;Sex in Crisis&#8221;. In the review, Louis Bayard says that Herzog implies that the religious right has hijacked the language of the liberal left, the better to control our sexuality. The rhetoric around sex work, for example:</p>
<blockquote><p>As recently as 2003, for example, a certain public figure was arguing that voluntary prostitution was &#8220;despicable&#8221; because it &#8220;demeans the value of women&#8221; and promotes &#8220;the severe degradation and exploitation of women, the literal rape of countless women around the globe.&#8221; Was it Andrea Dworkin? Catharine MacKinnon? The correct answer: pro-life Rep. Smith, R-N.J., whose distinctly illiberal purpose was to limit AIDS outreach efforts to prostitutes and sex workers in developing nations.</p></blockquote>
<p>We&#8217;ve seen some of this before. We&#8217;ve seen leaders of gay communities play down the association between anal sex with multiple partners and infection (including HIV, LGV and MRSA), so finding themselves in cahoots with &#8220;everyone is at risk&#8221; profiteers. We&#8217;ve seen African leaders adopting distinctly unsecular moral rhetoric rather than talk about sex. But the point is, this is all rhetoric. It is not debate, or conversation, or discussion. It is assertion. Asserting beliefs at one another doesn&#8217;t change minds. Kids go on having sex despite having been assaulted with messages telling them not to. Preachers go on employing sex workers despite ranting about the fact that prostitution is not work. Fundamentalists of all stripes go on asserting the virtue of programmes that don&#8217;t work, despite people like me constantly asserting the opposite. (Though my assertions at least come with data sets.) </p>
<p>And when I hear assertions like this: &#8220;Only those women who have been premaritally abstinent will be truly, deeply, and consistently desired by their husbands in the long years after marriage &#8230; Have no sex before marriage and you will have outstanding sex after marriage.&#8221; I go on snorting in disbelief. But then in my world, I couldn&#8217;t find a large enough sample of still-married virgins-at-marriage to disprove the assertion.</p>
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		<slash:comments>3</slash:comments>
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		<title>Should everyone be tested for HIV? Really?</title>
		<link>http://www.wisdomofwhores.com/2008/06/27/should-everyone-be-tested-for-hiv-really/</link>
		<comments>http://www.wisdomofwhores.com/2008/06/27/should-everyone-be-tested-for-hiv-really/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 27 Jun 2008 00:28:55 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>elizabeth</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Ideology and HIV]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Science]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Bronx]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[HIV testing]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[New York]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Politically correct]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Public health]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[surveillance]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.wisdomofwhores.com/?p=422</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[The Bronx, a borough of New York that is home to 1.3 million people, has decided that it is going to try to test all adults for HIV over the next three years, according to]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The Bronx, a borough of New York that is home to 1.3 million people, has decided that it is going to try to test all adults for HIV over the next three years, according to <a href=http://www.nytimes.com/2008/06/26/nyregion/26hiv.html">The New York Times</a>.</p>
<p>The NYT story elicited this comment from a friend of mine, a journalist who is much more informed about HIV than most. &#8220;The trouble with this story is it doesn&#8217;t say WHY they want to do testing nor indeed WHO has HIV! So are they testing people needlessly ? Is it good surveillance or bad public health? For us lay people, v confusing!&#8221;</p>
<p>It&#8217;s pretty confusing for a lot of non-lay people, too. I can safely say that is it NOT good surveillance. Surveillance aims to track trends in infection, to guide prevention and care programmes. This is case-finding, which is quite different. The Bronx is trying to identify individuals infected with HIV, so that it can get them onto treatment if need be. It OUGHT to be trying to identify people in need of prevention services, too, but that doesn&#8217;t seem to be on the agenda.</p>
<p>So is this mass testing good public health? Not if we ignore prevention needs, certainly. But even if we don&#8217;t, I&#8217;m dubious. To me, good public health implies protecting the greatest number of people at the lowest possible cost. Mass testing doesn&#8217;t do that. <span id="more-422"></span>In the United States, as in virtually every country outside of sub-Saharan Africa, new HIV infections are concentrated very largely among people who have pretty well-defined risks: they inject drugs or they&#8217;re active on the gay scene. People who sell sex or buy it will be at higher than usual risk, too. As is anyone who has recently immigrated from one of the handful of countries in sub-Saharan Africa where HIV prevalence is very high. The Bronx could scoop up a very significant proportion of infections by targeting its testing at those groups.</p>
<p>The problem is, of course, that targeted testing is perceived as &#8220;stigmatising&#8221;. The United States in general, and the Bronx in particular, has decided that it is better to test everyone than to risk making someone feel uncomfortable by pointing out that their behaviour puts them at higher than average risk for HIV infection. Fair enough, if you&#8217;ve got unlimited budgets. But this will mean spending US$ 12 a pop testing several hundred thousand people who are highly unlikely to be infected, to spare the feelings of those who might. I&#8217;d be interested to know whether residents of the Bronx who have difficulty accessing other basic health services think it&#8217;s a good investment.</p>
<p>While we&#8217;re on the subject, MTV is airing rap artist Common performing lyrics written by 18 year-old  Jose Rivera from Ewing, Nebraska. They&#8217;re hoping to encourage young people to get tested across the country on June 27th, National HIV testing day. Watch Common <a href="http://think.mtv.com/Campaign/CampaignView.aspx?name=iysl"> bring them in for testing</a> right here. Think of me rolling my eyes in time to the music. </p>
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		<slash:comments>4</slash:comments>
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		<title>Fire, brimstone and AIDS activists</title>
		<link>http://www.wisdomofwhores.com/2008/06/25/fire-brimstone-and-aids-activists/</link>
		<comments>http://www.wisdomofwhores.com/2008/06/25/fire-brimstone-and-aids-activists/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 25 Jun 2008 17:39:44 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>elizabeth</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Ideology and HIV]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Money and AIDS]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[AIDS]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[HIV]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Politically correct]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[prevention]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[The Wisdom of Whores]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[treatment]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[UNAIDS]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.wisdomofwhores.com/?p=421</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[I&#8217;m sure many readers are aware that there&#8217;s been a bit of a debate lately about spending on AIDS in the developing world. Is AIDS crowding out other infectious diseases, other health issues, other development issues? Or has the AIDS epidemic focused attention on the woeful neglect of health in developing countries, and will it [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>I&#8217;m sure many readers are aware that there&#8217;s been a bit of a debate lately about spending on AIDS in the developing world. Is AIDS crowding out other infectious diseases, other health issues, other development issues? Or has the AIDS epidemic focused attention on the woeful neglect of health in developing countries, and will it provide a rising tide of funding that will float all boats?</p>
<p>I&#8217;ve been copied in on an e-mail thread which discusses these issues, in sometimes extraordinarily vitriolic terms. Participants include the editor of <a href="http://www.thelancet.com/">The Lancet</a>, Richard Horton, Roger England, who infuriated many with his <a href="http://www.bmj.com/cgi/content/full/336/7652/1072">&#8220;Enough, already&#8221; comment about UNAIDS</a> in the BMJ, and a number of AIDS activists. I&#8217;ve questioned some of the consequences of activism in my book, but I have to say by far the most sensible comments here come from David Barr, who points out the overwhelmingly positive impact that AIDS activism has had on public health in general.</p>
<p>I myself come in for a bit of stick in this exchange, though largely for things I have never said. I&#8217;m curious what the reactions of anyone who has actually read The Wisdom of Whores to this debate might be.<span id="more-421"></span> So that you can follow the (often shrill) argument more easily, I&#8217;ve re-arranged comments in chronological order, so you can read from the top down.</p>
<p>&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8211;<br />
On Behalf Of   ellen.verheul@WEMOS.NL<br />
Re: CLARIFICATION &#8211; Re: notes from SuRG/H8 mtg   June10<br />
    Dear Sue,<br />
  Thanks for your reply. I fully agree with you that it is unacceptable to   rob   Peter to pay Paul. Unfortunately this is exactly what is happening, as   disease specific results are usually achieved by borrowing existing   health   systems components (most notably staff and staff time). This leads to   robbing   Peter to pay Paul, by default. I agree we should stop this.<br />
  The very idea behind the IHP was to do something about the multitude of   specific disease programmes is driving recipient governments insane,   while   many of the local priorities don&#8217;t get funding support at all. This   practice   should come to an end. We need more ánd more flexible aid; not another   increase of earmarked funding. The civil society principles are sending   out   a   dual and conflicting message: yes, more money for primary health care   please,   but also please increase funding for our priority diseases. We can see   what   this means this in full swing, in preparation for the aids conference.   When   a   donor increases the level of flexible funding, it is met by a cry that   this   is robbing from Peter etc, while instead we should welcome this as an   effort   to pool resources and achieving results for Peter, Paul and Joyce.<br />
  What I saw in a public district hospital in Zambia illustrates this   point.   There are similar stories from other countries. The few available   district   nurses are sent to training one after the other: to improve their skills   to   test, treat and council aids patients. They appreciate this, because it   enhances their knowledge and they have the opportunity to meet new   colleagues. In their hospital they are now able to provide drugs for   free to   aids patients, they can spend time to council patients (30 min, much   more   than they were used to spend on any patient), the aids clinic is nicely   painted, the lab is functioning, and they receive extra allowances to   top up   their meagre salaries. They feel rewarded and their job satisfaction has   increased: they are now able to properly treat patients who they could   previously not. The aids patients feel encouraged. They get a sense of   their   right to proper treatment and they start demand these rights. It seems   that   this disease specific programme is strengthening the local system.<br />
  The other patients are waiting in a longer queue, for staff that has   less   time available because of the additional tasks, and the time spent per   patient is very short. They still have to pay for the drugs they are   prescribed. The ward is not painted. The nurses are not paid incentives   for   these &#8216;regular&#8217; clinics and they treat the patients less friendly. They   realise this, and feel guilty about it. But they feel exhausted. Aids   treatment coverage is going up, while vaccination rates are going down.   The   woman in child labour, the child with pneumonia, the aids patient with a   broken leg: they don&#8217;t get the care they are entitled to. In fact, they   are   worse off as there is less time available and they are now seen as   second-class patients. And the situation is getting worse, as aids   organisations are recruiting staff from the public sector and from the   private for profit sector, to run the aids clinics outside of the public   sector. They find the staff, because they pay higher salaries and offer   better working conditions, leaving the public sector behind.<br />
  My question is: who is Peter and who is Paul?<br />
  I wish that IHP civil society principles could unambiguously speak about   health, health services and strengthening health systems so they respond   to   local communities&#8217; health needs.<br />
  I don&#8217;t believe in civil society principles that include language that   legitimises the call for extra disease specific funding. Disease   specific   programmes are usually not accountable to the rights of other patients.   If   disease priorities are to be set, it is by the local community, not by   donors. I think IHP should be very clear and outspoken about that.<br />
  Warm regards   Ellen Verheul   Wemos<br />
&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;<br />
  On Tue, Jun 17, 2008 at 6:46 PM, Gorik Ooms <gorik.ooms@scarlet.be   <mailto:gorik.ooms%40scarlet.be    wrote:<br />
  Dear Ellen,<br />
  Your message makes me feel very sad, and a bit angry. Your   implicit   accusation to AIDS activists, that because of their work other patients   have   become &#8216;second class&#8217; patients is unfair, and not supported by evidence.<br />
  Why do you think DfID announced its £6 billion commitment over seven   years   for health systems and services as part of its revised AIDS strategy?   The   IHP   and all the annoucements around it provided plenty occasions to make   this   commitment public. Why did DfID want to use &#8216;universal access to AIDS   treatment&#8217; as the platform to announce this?<br />
  First, because as soon as one donor government increases its commitment   to   fight AIDS, you have AIDS activists all over the world calculating how   much   their own government should contribute, to &#8216;measure up&#8217;. PEPFAR 2 will   contribute US$10 billion per year? Let&#8217;s see, the USA has a GDP of US$12   trillion, the UK has a GDP of US$2 trillion, therefor DfID should   contribute   at least US$1.6 billion per year. Oops, the UK contribution to the   Global   Fund is insufficient. So let&#8217;s throw in the commitment for health   systems   and   services, and hope that AIDS activists will accept it as a contribution   to   fight AIDS.<br />
  Second, the unpainted ward, the insufficient and demotivated health   workers   facing too long queues, the empty pharmacies, all existed before AIDS   treatment started. And no donor really gave a damn. Too much foreign   assistance would only create aid-dependency, wouldn&#8217;t it? Too much   reliance   on foreign assistance would not be &#8216;sustainable&#8217;, or would it? It is the   global AIDS response that made people realise how unacceptable this   situation   is, and how stupid the &#8216;development&#8217; paradigm is. That&#8217;s why there is a   certain logic and honesty in including this commitment to health systems   and   services in a revised AIDS strategy: without the global AIDS response,   this   commitment would not have existed.<br />
  The global AIDS response is the locomotive that drives the comprehensive   primary health care train. You can be bitter about that, you can   complain:   &#8216;Why did nobody listen to us, when we demanded more investments in   health   systems and services?&#8217; Sure, it is unfair. But it&#8217;s reality. DfID did   not   listen to you, but it was forced to listen to AIDS activists.<br />
  We have a unique opportunity here to transform the fight against AIDS   into a   fight for comprehensive primary health care. Blaming AIDS activists for   turning people who don&#8217;t have AIDS into &#8216;second class&#8217; patients doesn&#8217;t   help.   Please don&#8217;t bomb the locomotive.<br />
  Take care,<br />
  Gorik<br />
&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;-</p>
<p>On Behalf Of   Roger   England   Sent: Tuesday, June 17, 2008 4:28 PM<br />
    Gregg and others<br />
  I agree with Richard here. Not your best speech.<br />
  There&#8217;s a lot of truth in most of the views being expressed just now – on   all sides of the debate.<br />
  On the one hand, HIV has taken more than its due share of resources. FACT.   See attached.<br />
  On the other, the rich world should make much more money available for   health care in poor countries if we are going to see big improvements in   health resulting from stupid and miserable conditions. This could be a   FACT   and is more likely to be if we can show that we can spend it well. In my   view we have not done this yet partly because we have put one disease   above   all others and convinced the world to treat it as something more special   than it is.<br />
  Those of us who have worked in health for a long time have not fought as   successfully for funding as activists have for HIV. FACT. Well done. And   if   you are now going to put those talents to use across the health board, who   could resist?<br />
  There&#8217;s a lot in common amongst us all. And it&#8217;s time to build on this, as   you and I have discussed privately. But we all have to give each other   some   respect – none of us are in it for the money!<br />
  It is vital that we all think seriously about where we go from here, try   to   put our egos and vendettas aside, and see what common ground we have.   There   are two broad futures. One is that the world will soon have enough of HIV   activists and there will be a backlash against HIV funding that may drag   other funding down with it. The other is that HIV activists will be seen   as   a leading part of a new international movement for effective health   funding   that shows results for all those in need. What&#8217;s it to be?<br />
  Regards.<br />
  Roge<br />
&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;<br />
  On 6/17/08 2:32 PM, &#8220;Horton, Richard (ELS-CAM)&#8221; <Richard.Horton@lancet.com   <mailto:Richard.Horton%40lancet.com      wrote:<br />
  Hey Gregg &#8211; I probably should let your email pass and not be   provoked&#8230;but   look, this is a debate we MUST have. It is reaching a crescendo and we   need   to   face up to it. But please &#8211; this debate is more than you present it.   DFID,   WHO, UNAIDS, UNICEF, WB, and Gates are all complex organisations. They   can&#8217;t   be reduced to a single view. They are full of attitudes competing for   priority. Slamming those organisations as if they are the caricatures you   describe doesn&#8217;t serve anybody&#8217;s best interests.<br />
  For me:<br />
  1. I am not saying do less with less. I am arguing do more with more,   side by   side with you.<br />
  2. I am not blaming anybody, least of all the AIDS community. Far from it   &#8211; I   cite the AIDS community, together with others, as examples of how civil   society movements can change society.<br />
  3. But I am putting The Lancet &#8211; or trying to, although I&#8217;ll be the first   to   admit my/our imperfections &#8211; in the frontline to fight for EVERYBODY, not   only   those living with AIDS. Travel in Africa, Asia, or Latin America and it&#8217;s   so   clearly obvious that AIDS is one important component of many important   components. I wish we could display a little more solidarity across   sectors,   diseases, illnesses &#8211; for children, women, mothers, those with NCDs,   mental   ill-health, and so on. Not pitting one disease against another &#8211; as so   many   say now, campaigning vertically perhaps, but spending horizontally.<br />
  4. Please represent what we say in its totality and accurately Gregg.<br />
  For our part &#8211; and we are only one small voice in all this &#8211; we are   launching   a report on HIV prevention in Mexico. So please don&#8217;t say that somehow I   am   against the AIDS community. You insult us and those who work with us. And   that   serves only our REAL enemies &#8211; and there remain many.<br />
  Richard<br />
&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8211;<br />
    Sent: Tue Jun 17 19:05:   Subject: Pitting AIDS Against Primary Care&#8211;Your Legacy?<br />
  Dear Gorik&#8211;   It&#8217;s good to have Ellen&#8217;s views out in the open. I&#8217;ve cc-ed a lot of   people on this, since many of them hold these views in private and   don&#8217;t have the courage to face us, to talk to us, to debate us on the   issues. It&#8217;s time to call them out.   Frankly, these opinions are the new conventional wisdom that holds   sway at DfiD, makes it into the Economist and Financial Times, it&#8217;s   what editors of major journals now espouse, what the &#8220;thought leaders&#8221;   insist upon: AIDS has gotten too much money, too much attention, all   based on falsified data or the screaming of AIDS activists.   Furthermore, this money is ill-spent, either in totality because it   distorts health systems or based on supposedly erroneous   epidemiological assumptions. Roger England, Richard Horton, Jim Chin,   Stewart Tyson, Elizabeth Pisani all make these kinds of arguments, all   taken at face value and really not challenged at all yet on their   evidentiary basis.   NO ONE AMONG THE NEW CRITICS OF HIV/AIDS HAS EVER SAID THAT &#8220;HEALTH   FOR ALL&#8221; WAS A JOKE IN INTERNATIONAL HEALTH CIRCLES UNTIL AIDS CAME   ALONG.   Our esteemed colleagues at bilateral agencies, in governments, have   underfunded health as a matter of principle for decades, telling   patients in developing countries that they needed to settle for &#8220;the   cost-effective intervention&#8221; and wait for a the next millennium to   have what they take for granted&#8211;ready access to comprehensive primary   care for themselves and their families. Technical agencies like the   Bank and WHO promoted selective primary care&#8211;DOING LESS WITH LESS&#8211;as   the Malthusian option because they answer to countries who don&#8217;t want   to pay for more.   Then AIDS activists came along and said, wait a minute&#8211;why should we   in Zambia, or South Africa die of a disease that is a chronic   manageable condition in the UK, in the USA, in the Netherlands? We   raised the stakes higher in international health than they&#8217;ve ever   been, drove more funding into the field than there has been in   decades. Most of us also have fought for primary care/health systems   strengthening for decades too&#8211;most AIDS activists I know have pushed   for national health care in the USA since the 1980s, a real &#8220;people&#8217;s   health service&#8221; in South Africa and elsewhere, and have strong links   with other health activists.   What Ellen fails to recognize is that SHE AND HER COLLEAGUES HAVE   FAILED FOR DECADES TO GET ATTENTION FOR HEALTH ISSUES IN DEVELOPING   COUNTRIES AND ARE NOW BLAMING US FOR THEIR FAILURES.   We won&#8217;t go back though to the days when DfiD argued as they did in    that ARVs were not sustainable, cost effective, or what now   Mead Over likes to call an entitlement (please take that man&#8217;s health   insurance away and see what he thinks about his own entitlement). We   want comprehensive primary care, which means full funding for   health&#8211;not chopping up the AIDS pie so we can smooth out inequities   rather than confronting the absolute parsimony of our leaders when   confronted with the truly minuscule percentages of GDPs that we&#8217;re   asking for, for 0.7% or 1% of massive budgets from OECD nations, or   15% from developing countries themselves. With NO NEW MONEY FROM   governments, what we are being asked to do is to FIGHT FOR CRUMBS FROM   THE TABLE. We won&#8217;t do it.   Now let&#8217;s talk about the other &#8220;critiques&#8221; of AIDS&#8211;the UNAIDS   inflates the numbers or there is no generalized epidemic from Chin and   Pisani. Attributing a scheming intelligence to UNAIDS that has   twisted the data for political purposes gives the agency too much   credit&#8211;perhaps we are working with weak estimates because we have   very little data on the ground in most countries. Furthermore, how   many people have to be infected for the AIDS epidemic to rise to a   level of seriousness in James Chin&#8217;s book? No generalized epidemic?   Dear Dr. Pisani, please come to Africa where we can discuss this in   the communities in which we work. As for the notion that anyone   believes that we don&#8217;t have concentrated epidemics in most other   places is setting up straw men&#8211;we know the epidemic is concentrated   in most other regions in gay men, in drug users, sex workers,   women&#8230;how about criticising the fact that we can&#8217;t get Russia to   legalize methadone, the USA to fund needle exchange, most countries to   decriminalize gay sex and sex work, protect women from rape rather   than piling it on the &#8220;AIDS establishment&#8221;&#8211;because in the end all you   do is pile it on the vulnerable groups you say that we should be   focusing our attention on?   Gorik&#8211;I can work in partnership, I can work in coalition, I can and   have worked to promote healthcare for people for almost 20 years.   I DON&#8217;T HEAR ANYTHING CONSTRUCTIVE IN ENGLAND OR TYSON&#8217;S CALLS TO   ABOLISH UNAIDS, HORTON&#8217;S CLAIM THAT AIDS IS FUNDED AT THE LEVEL IT IS   BECAUSE WE SCREAM TOO MUCH, CHIN&#8217;S NOTION THAT UNAIDS LIES ABOUT THE   DATA, OR PISANI&#8217;S IDEA THAT WE&#8217;RE PEDDLING THE IDEA OF AIDS AS   PRACTICALLY BIRD FLU.   I am tired of it.   So, ELLEN. STEWART. ROGER. RICHARD. JAMES. ELIZABETH.   Get on board.   We&#8217;re fighting for health care&#8211;the kind that Europeans take for   granted&#8211;where you can get WHATEVER YOU NEED FREE AT POINT OF SERVICE.   We&#8217;re fighting to get rich countries to PAY THEIR FAIR SHARE.   We&#8217;re fighting for poor countries to stop paying for Mercedes-Benzes   for ministers and devote at least 15% of their budgets to health.   We&#8217;re fighting for patients to have a voice&#8211;all patients, not just   people with AIDS, but we&#8217;re not interested in shutting anyone up.   We&#8217;re interested in being at the table when decisions about our lives   are made&#8211;not leaving the decisions up to men on Palace Street, in   Washington DC, in Berkeley, or wherever else you lurk&#8211;&#8221;the experts&#8221;   who now feature themselves as the guardians of public health and the   poor but ABSOLUTE FUCKED UP and let the AIDS epidemic rage out of   control for years before doing a god-damn thing and spent their time   before that watching health systems crumble into dust since Alma Ata.   We&#8217;re fighting for the sex workers, the drug users, the gay men, the   poor, the women that were less important than your careers, because if   they were important to you, you&#8217;d have been writing books about them,   talking to the Economist, the Financial Times, about them a long, long   time ago.   You know we&#8217;ve been having interesting debates among ourselves about   how to build a movement for health for all&#8211;but all I hear from &#8220;the   experts&#8221; is about tearing down, settling scores, getting even with   AIDS&#8230;it sounds like bitterness, vindictiveness, sounds like going   back to the bad, old days, because, you know, well, these guys sort of   liked the past&#8211;at least the dying had the courtesy then not to make   too much noise as they went to their graves.   Gregg<br />
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Dear Gregg, David, Konstantin, Lydia, and others<br />
I think we need to distinguish between disease specific funding and disease specific programmes. The latter can be effective, depending on the type of programme, the specific context etc. For aids, the general acknowledgment is that without improving the system, it is difficult to make further progress. The level and speed of integration (needed to make disease specific results sustainable) into the broader health system, will probably depend on what is locally feasible. But is it integration that we are looking for, or is this issue in fact dividing this IHP group?<br />
The other questions is whether maintaining disease specific funding is the most effective way to enhance integration, promote synergies etc. I think not. But that does not mean I propose going back to the &#8216;bad old days&#8217; of health reforms, as Gregg believes. These reforms failed because of a dramatic lack of funding and because of a focus on building structures rather than delivering services. This should not happen again. So this round should be on delivery and on adequate funding, ensuring that services are responsive to local needs. Local communities should be engaged, informed about their rights and holding local providers to account. That does not necessarily have to take the form of a fight; sometimes dialogue is as effective. Dialogue and improved understanding can also lead to local coalitions, strengthening the call for accountability and needs based planning and budgetting from the community upwards to the national level. Uganda is providing an inspiring example that this works. Civil society advocacy, I think, should be about strengthening national systems and checks and balances, making sure everybody gets heard. Especially in the health sector this crucial role of civil society has been weak, with the aidsmovement as an exception. We need CSO action beyond mobilising resources for and providing specific services.<br />
Going back to the funding question: calling for more flexible funding for health does not necessarily imply the premature end of disease specific programmes. Or would it? For how accountable are donors to people and is this a sustainable way forward? More funding is needed, but with less prescriptions.<br />
Ellen<br />
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Van: gregg.gonsalves@gmail.com<br />
Re: ITPC Re: Pitting AIDS Against Primary Care&#8211;YourLegacy?<br />
 Ellen- When the 3&#215;5 initiative was announced&#8211;the WHO&#8217;s effort to get 3 million people on ART by 2005&#8211;a senior official from a European development agency came up to me and said &#8220;I can&#8217;t support this, we need to invest in a strictly horizontal approach to health, these stand-alone initiatives never work, or they only work for a while.&#8221; He was making a similar case to Roger, to you, that this earmarking for AIDS is wrong, was wrong. Well, we now have 3 million people on ARVs and to make it a sustainable success we need to invest in strengthening primary care overall, and it&#8217;s something we all can support. But if we never fought for 3&#215;5 it is not as if the world would have resounded with the clear and loud call for primary health care for all.  In fact, what the experts and world leaders have bought into for many decades is selective primary care&#8211;doing less with less, for making small and scattered investments in health.  AIDS has changed that equation has explicit said we want more even if it costs more. You may feel now is the time to put everything into one basket for health funding that the time for vertical, stand-alone initiatives is now.  I would suggest that we need a mix of different kinds of financial architectures to support health in the short-term, while we push towards full funding for comprehensive primary care in the long term.  This means maintaining some &#8220;verticality&#8221; for AIDS, for TB, malaria and other major conditions over the short term in order to consolidate our gains, or at least not reverse them, with an explicit commitment to strengthen health systems and integrate programmes now, with strong civil society oversight and participation and transparency from donors and governments. I am not sure your fondness for the traditional way of doing things&#8211;let&#8217;s go horizontal now all-the-way because that&#8217;s what is supposed to work, though it never did&#8211;is going to give you the end results you want, that we all want. In fact, the danger is that we can &#8220;cut AIDS down to size&#8221; and we may end up simply getting disinvestments in health as you get the most effective activists to leave the debate, or more broadly distributed under-investments in health, with less engagement of communities, less transparency, and less effectiveness. We all agree with comprehensive, primary care for all as our goal. Not sure your &#8220;shock therapy&#8221; and Roger&#8217;s&#8211;instituting purely horizontal financing and programming immediately is a wise choice. Perhaps you and Roger can explain to me why removing all verticality right now from the system is the best thing to do, and why it won&#8217;t hurt people with HIV, with TB, etc&#8230;why wouldn&#8217;t a gradualist approach work or do less harm? G<br />
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On 6/22/08 3:28 PM, &#8220;David  Barr&#8221; <d.barr@earthlink.net  wrote:<br />
  I fear the tone of this exchange will hinder further dialogue. I feel   there   are some missing pieces in the way the response to HIV is characterized in   Mr.   England&#8217;s piece and some of the other comments. I agree with most of what   Gregg said last week and I share some of his anger. But I think that the   expression of that anger might not be strategic at this point and good   strategy should trump catharsis at this point.<br />
  First, the short piece that Mr. England attached to his message seems a   bit   disingenuous or at least incomplete. While he states that AIDS has   captured   funds that might have been allocated for other health needs, his   calculations   don&#8217;t include what he thinks should have been spent on HIV over that time   period.  This would change the degree of alleged misappropriation between   HIV   and non-HIV funds.<br />
  I am sure he has an answer to this. Ultimately, I don&#8217;t think it matters.   I   think he is missing the point.  I don&#8217;t know Roger England. He states he   has   been involved in public health for some time. I imagine he has an   impressive   resume. But I don&#8217;t know who he is representing in this discussion. In his   piece, he refers to himself as a &#8220;we&#8221; that might be &#8220;surprised&#8221; by AIDS   activists.  I don&#8217;t know who the &#8220;we&#8221; is.  I do know who the AIDS   activists   are.<br />
  At the recent HIV Implementers conference in Kampala, Daniel Low Beer   presented data on the impact of HIV response in Uganda from the 1980&#8242;s and   1990&#8242;s.  He showed how a key factor in the success of reduced infection   rates   was the ability of affected communities to engage in information sharing,   support and health programs.  He showed that in addition to the important,   essential contributions of aid and increased health services; that link   with   affected communities, which by its nature took place at grassroots levels,   was   a key element to success.  Throughout the conference, the buzzword was   &#8220;engagement&#8221;.  We heard numerous examples of methods undertaken to engage   affected individuals and communities to utilize prevention, testing, and   care   services.<br />
  If one primary challenge to any public health intervention is securing the   engagement of affected populations to become educated, change behavior,   utilize health services, etc, then the HIV response is probably the   greatest   example of success in the history of public health. It is a history of   engagement by people faced with a health threat demanding care. And, when   such   care was not provided, they created it themselves.  Is there a more   poignant   example of community engagement in health than HIV? Is the social capital   created through AIDS over the past 30 years part of Mr. England&#8217;s   calculations   on the impact of HIV response on health systems? I think not. At worst,   his   rhetoric reeks of scorn and disdain for this work. At best, he shows a   lack of   understanding of it. And England&#8217;s lack of understand or, at least, his   lack   of respect of this heroic work, sits at the core of Gregg&#8217;s anger.<br />
  We really need to understand the history of the AIDS response.  It was not   a   response of the public health establishment rising to a challenge of a new   disease.  AIDS is exceptional not because of the means of transmission and   course of the syndrome (though these are important factors). Rather, it is   the   response to HIV by those immediately affected that makes it extremely   exceptional. The public health establishment and government has been and   continues to be dragged into AIDS at every step. And at the center of   those   doing the dragging are people living with HIV.  GIPA is NOT a   politically-correct, feel good notion.  Apart from drug discovery, GIPA   lives   at the heart of most of what has gone right in AIDS since the start of the   epidemic. The list of accomplishments is too long to detail here but they   include:<br />
  •        The development of home-based care models<br />
  •        The creation of safer sex prevention strategies including condom   use<br />
  •        The creation of syringe exchange<br />
  •        An overhaul of drug development practices in the United States   leading to drug approval times cut by 50%<br />
  •        Opportunistic infection prophylaxis<br />
  •        The creation of the Global Fund and a multilateral commitment to   provide HIV treatment to all who need it &#8211; probably the greatest public   health   experiment in any of our lifetimes.<br />
    This is NOT only a Western-based response and to say so disregards the   crucial   work of hundreds, if not thousands of organizations working in their own   ways   with meager funding that have changed the course of HIV in their countries   and   the world. A very short list includes:<br />
  •        TASO (Uganda)<br />
  •        Thai Drug Users Network<br />
  •        All Ukrainian Network of People Living with AIDS<br />
  •        Treatment Action Campaign (South Africa)<br />
  •        Front AIDS (Russia)<br />
  •        Grupo Pela Vida (Brazil)<br />
  •        AIDS Care China<br />
  •        Blue Diamond Society (Nepal)<br />
  •        Nava Kiran Plus (Nepal)<br />
  •        Manipur Network of People Living with AIDS<br />
  •        Bali Plus<br />
  •        Vivo Positivo (Chile)<br />
  •        Agua Buena Human Rights (Costa Rica)<br />
  •        Associacion Lutte Contre Sida (Moracco)<br />
  •        Treatment Action Movement (Nigeria)<br />
  •        RIP+ (Cote d&#8217;Ivoire)</p>
<p>  The list goes on and on. And, we must add to it the most important   component –   the independent actions taken by individuals and communities to overcome   significant, life-threatening obstacles to demand care and to support one   another. The stories of people stepping forward to declare their HIV   status so   they can receive care are endless. These stories include people being   stoned,   shot and burned to death, imprisoned, shunned by family and community.   Yet,   despite this challenges, people came and continue to come forward – to   demand   health care.  In so many cases, these are people who are considered   garbage by   their governments and society – drug users, gay men, sex workers, poor   women.   And yet, they step up.  Isn&#8217;t this exactly what anyone interested in   public   health dreams of – this level of engagement in health?<br />
  The public health establishment did not and cannot create such a level of   engagement. It occurs. And when it occurs, you should invest in it,   nurture it   and let it grow.  Increasingly, AIDS activists are TB activists. They are   activists for sexual and reproductive health. They are advocates for food   security, for housing, for transparent governance, for human rights. For   reasons I won&#8217;t go into here, history shows that empowerment theory is a   particularly potent force in the response to AIDS. The social capital we   create is enormous, but omitted from Mr. England&#8217;s calculations. Why?  He   cannot deny our history because he doesn&#8217;t know how to turn it into a   dollar   amount or regardless of whether it is quantified or not in his journal of   choice.<br />
  If AIDS advocates have succeeded in securing funding, we have done so as   people directly affected by AIDS. Our success is an example of community   mobilization for health, not advocacy by a &#8220;special interest group&#8221;.  So,   when   we are characterized as &#8220;HIV protagonists&#8221; who are not committed to health   generally, it makes us crazy. We didn&#8217;t get into this because we &#8220;favored&#8221;   one   disease over another. We didn&#8217;t get into to create a funding stream. We   got   into it because we have immediate needs for health care and our   governments   were not and are not meeting those needs. We are and have always been   demanding health care.  We did not and do not advocate for vertical   systems or   horizontal systems – we advocate for our lives. (That is who the AIDS   activists are in this debate. I don&#8217;t know who Mr. England is.) And we   worked   to build programs that meet those needs.<br />
  The funding allocation issues are real. The need to support improved and   sustained health care systems is crucial.  How do we do it? At the   Implementers Conference, David Wilson from the World Bank discussed the   funding allocation issues in a very rational way and we should build our   discussion from those remarks. I think there is much on which we can   agree.   Here is a very partial list. First, we all agree that health care needs   more   funding. Second, we can use our HIV funding more effectively. Third,   criticizing UNAIDS is like shooting fish in a barrel and anyone can do it.   Fourth, we can probably agree that there are places in the world that   receive   a disproportionate amount of HIV funding to need and places that do not   receive sufficient HIV funding.  Fourth, whatever one&#8217;s opinion on   generalized   epidemics, we should be focusing our efforts on affected communities.   Fifth,   providing quality health care to all is the primary goal. Sixth, political   will remains the primary obstacle to achieving this goal.<br />
  David Barr<br />
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Van: roger.england@healthsystemsworkshop.org   Verzonden op: 23 juni 2008<br />
  David<br />
  I agree with everything in your last paragraph, but it has not been my   experience that the whole HIV movement has had primary care at heart from   the beginning otherwise it would not have tolerated the weakening effect   that dedicated HIV money has had on routine health services by creating two   tier quality, free drugs for HIV but not for other diseases, and attracting   staff from other important areas of care, management and research. I think   it has been a relatively recent realisation by many that we are not going to   succeed in HIV services if we don&#8217;t have the primary care systems.  There   may be exceptions but they have not been as active in promoting this as they   have been in promoting HIV.  You say that HIV activists are also activists   for reproductive health, but I have not heard the cries of indignation as   FP/RH budgets have been decimated in favour of HIV.   http://www.populationaction.org/Issues/U.S._Policies/FPRH/Summary.shtml<br />
  Some HIV money is beginning to be spent differently as countries try to use   it to strengthen health systems – but this remains very difficult because of   the strings attached to GF, PEPFAR and other dedicated money, and it would   be infinitely better to have money for health systems in the first place.   But let&#8217;s be honest: we wanted new money spent on ART, and the fact that   countries might not have spent extra money on ART but on things that saved   even more lives would not have been to our liking, would it?<br />
  Gregg&#8217;s answer to this is that we need more money for health, not less for   HIV.  But my argument is that we are not going to get a lot more money for   health unless we can show we will spend it wisely and, amongst other things,   that means spending a sensible proportion on HIV. What are we hearing   instead?  UNAIDS wants $42 billion a year for HIV alone which means   effectively $36 billion in aid which is three times the whole health aid   budget.<br />
  I am signing off from this wide circulation now – taking Gorik&#8217;s advice!  I   have been debating with Gregg and Gorik privately and am happy to continue   talking about numbers or specifics on a one to one basis without bothering   everyone else.<br />
  Regards<br />
  Roge<br />
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On Mon, Jun 23, 2008 at 12:14 PM,  <ellen.verheul@wemos.nl  wrote:   Dear all,<br />
  I don&#8217;t think it is a good idea if anyone leaves this discussion, for it   needs to move. To me the ethical and emotional sides are as important as the   technical one on facts, figures etc. They are sometimes mixing up into   something explosive. But it also brings us to the core of the disagreement.<br />
  When it comes to ethics: I think everybody would agree with the notion that   people on aids treatment are supposed to be on treatment also in the future.   I don&#8217;t think anyone ever did a proposal to take people off treatment in   this debate. But the right to health applies to all people, regardless of   what disease they suffer from. Pointing at the rights of pregnant women or   children with a broken leg, does not equals ignoring or even denying aids   patients&#8217; rights, although this is sometimes suggested. No matter how hard I   try, it does not make sense to me to say or suggest that any group of   patients should wait until the rights of other groups are fulfilled. I hope   that we can genuinly agree on this issue of equal rights, and feel   responsible for the rights of different patients even if we focus our   attention on one group.   When it comes to money and funding: if we have the ideal world that we are   all fighting for, then yes, there would be enough funding available for   proper health care for all. But before we get there, decisions on allocation   and priorities still have to be made. Apart from the question how we   increase the pie for health, we thus cannot ignore the allocation question.   This is painfull by definition, but emotional arguments are not sufficient.   What criteria do we apply? Pretending there are no governments and donors   with their particular agenda&#8217;s that may not be trusted, just human rights   arguments: how would we do this? How do we ensure that investmenst made have   the most lasting results? How do we ensure that allocation is enhancing   equity and justice? How do we prevent retrogression for any patient? Who   should have a say: those that are organised and have a strong voice, or also   those still voiceless? For me, these decisions should be made at local   level, based on local needs and opportunities. If we want to avoid setting   priorities for others by telling donors to earmark in advance, then we are   overruling local decision making and priority setting. We are also making   the quest for synergies more difficult by putting fences in between. I think   this is not acceptable. Therefore I support a call for more money for   health, which could be earmarked if we don&#8217;t trust governments to make wise   decisions, but for health, not for separate diseases.<br />
  Ellen</p>
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		<title>So many ways to be gay</title>
		<link>http://www.wisdomofwhores.com/2008/06/19/so-many-ways-to-be-gay/</link>
		<comments>http://www.wisdomofwhores.com/2008/06/19/so-many-ways-to-be-gay/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 19 Jun 2008 00:07:37 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>elizabeth</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Ideology and HIV]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Men, women and others]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[California]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[gay]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[gay marriage]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[MSM]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Politically correct]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.wisdomofwhores.com/?p=410</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Further to yesterday&#8217;s post, I find myself in California at a happy time. Same-sex marriages are a huge step forward in undermining the absurd qualms that our society still has about who has sex with whom. I notice that the qualms are still reflected, though, in reports of the happy day. My New York Times [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Further to yesterday&#8217;s post, I find myself in California at a happy time. Same-sex marriages are a huge step forward in undermining the absurd qualms that our society still has about who has sex with whom. I notice that the qualms are still reflected, though, in reports of the happy day. My New York Times &#8220;gay alert&#8221; service served me up these two stories in one e-mail. I felt like I was playing one of those 1970s women&#8217;s magazine games where you have to spot seven differences in two near-identical pictures. Here are the two headers:<br />
Version 1:<br />
<strong>Same-Sex Marriages Begin in California</strong><br />
By JESSE McKINLEY<br />
SAN FRANCISCO — With a series of simple “I dos,” gay couples across California inaugurated the state’s court-approved and potentially short-lived legalization of same-sex marriage on Monday, the first of what is expected to be a crush of such unions in coming weeks. </p>
<p>Version 2:<br />
<strong>Gay Marriages Begin in California</strong><br />
By JESSE McKINLEY<br />
SAN FRANCISCO — With a series of simple “I dos,” gay and lesbian couples across California inaugurated the state’s court-sanctioned and potentially short-lived experiment with same-sex marriage on Monday, the first of what are expected to be a crush of such unions in coming weeks.</p>
<p>I&#8217;m interested to know what readers think of these differences in nuance. As we know, getting our tongues around gay behaviour has always been fraught. The difficulties gave me one of my favourite footnotes in The Wisdom of Whores. (For those who haven&#8217;t read it yet &#8212; don&#8217;t skip the footnotes. Some of the best laughs are there). A taster: </p>
<blockquote><p>&#8220;I leave those who think I am exaggerating to make sense of this footnote from a recent UNAIDS document entitled Men Who have Sex With Men, “While we use the term ‘men who have sex with men’ here it is within the context of understanding that the word ‘man’/’men’ is socially constructed. Nor does its use imply that it is an identity term referring to an identifiable community that can be segregated and so labeled. Within the framework of male-to-male sex, there are a range of masculinities, along with diverse sexual and gender identities, communities, networks, and collectives, as well as just behaviours without any sense of affiliation to an identity or community.” </p></blockquote>
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		<title>UK tightens sexims laws: no more bastards</title>
		<link>http://www.wisdomofwhores.com/2008/04/05/uk-tightens-sexism-laws/</link>
		<comments>http://www.wisdomofwhores.com/2008/04/05/uk-tightens-sexism-laws/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sat, 05 Apr 2008 21:35:44 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>elizabeth</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Men, women and others]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Gender]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[language]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Politically correct]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[sexism]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.wisdomofwhores.com/2008/04/05/uk-tightens-sexism-laws/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[As of today, UK companies can no longer use the &#8220;bastard defence&#8221; against claims of sexist abuse. The bastard defence rests on the claim that you&#8217;re not being sexist if you call a female colleague a silly cunt, because you&#8217;re just as likely to call a male colleague a stupid bastard. This &#8220;we&#8217;re just as [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>As of today, UK companies can no longer use the &#8220;bastard defence&#8221; against claims of sexist abuse.</p>
<p>The bastard defence rests on the claim that you&#8217;re not being sexist if you call a female colleague a silly cunt, because you&#8217;re just as likely to call a male colleague a stupid bastard. This &#8220;we&#8217;re just as foul to everyone so it&#8217;s not abusive&#8221; is a <em>different</em> Bastard Defence from the one used by <a hef= "http://www.news.com.au/dailytelegraph/story/0,22049,23034608-5001023,00.html">Australian cricketer Brad Hogg</a> earlier this year. He had to claim that calling members of the Indian team bastards wasn&#8217;t intended as an insult to their descent (which would be illegal) but merely to their lineage. I wonder what the players&#8217; fathers made of the distinction.</p>
<p>Bad enough that foul-mouthed employees might cost more money in law suits. But British bosses now have to worry about their customers, too. According to the <a href= "http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/2bb3c33c-02a9-11dd-9388-000077b07658.html">Financial Times</a>, the law which comes into force today will make an employer liable for sexist and abusive language on the part of customers. It gets worse. A company can be prosecuted if a third party takes offence at an insult aimed at some absent soul. So if the Arsenal team members make rude jokes about women when they&#8217;re in the all-male locker room and a particularly delicate flower is upset on behalf of his girlfriend, he can take Arsene Wenger and co. to the cleaners. The <a href="http://www.dailymail.co.uk">Daily Mail</a> doesn&#8217;t seem to have found the story yet, but I&#8217;m sure it won&#8217;t be long before we hear the siren calls of &#8220;Pollitical Correctness Gone Mad&#8221;.</p>
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		<title>Should scientists bend over and take it?</title>
		<link>http://www.wisdomofwhores.com/2008/01/25/should-scientists-bend-over-and-take-it/</link>
		<comments>http://www.wisdomofwhores.com/2008/01/25/should-scientists-bend-over-and-take-it/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 25 Jan 2008 12:43:16 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>elizabeth</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Ideology and HIV]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[The sex trade]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[MRSA]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[MSM]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Politically correct]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.wisdomofwhores.com/2008/01/25/should-scientists-bend-over-and-take-it/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[In an earlier post, I worried that we were repeating the mistakes of the AIDS epidemic by allowing political correctness to stand in the way of the facts. At issue is a study of MRSA, which indicated that a nasty, drug-resistant form of the bug was spreading among gay men, possibly through sexual contact. You [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>In an <a href= "http://www.wisdomofwhores.com/2008/01/21/gay-plague-hysteria-has-aids-taught-us-nothing/">earlier post</a>, I  worried that we were repeating the mistakes of the AIDS epidemic by allowing political correctness to stand in the way of the facts. At issue is a <a href="http://www.annals.org/cgi/content/full/-00204v1">study of MRSA</a>, which indicated that a nasty, drug-resistant form of the bug was spreading among gay men, possibly through sexual contact. You don&#8217;t have to be gay to get it, but you&#8217;re 16 times more like to have it if you happen to be a man who happens to have sex with other men.</p>
<p>When the study by scientists at UCSF was first published, the university put out a <a href= "http://pub.ucsf.edu/newsservices/releases//">press release</a> headlined: &#8220;Sexually active gay men vulnerable to new, highly infectious bacteria&#8221;. The phrase that drew ire from gay rights campaigners such as <a href= "http://mpetrelis.blogspot.com/">Michael Petrelis</a>, <a href="http://citizenchris.typepad.com/citizenchris/2008/01/experts-rethink.html">Chris Cain</a>, <a href ="http://www.boxturtlebulletin.com/is-mrsa-the-new-gay-plague/"> Jim Burroway</a> and even <a href="http://andrewsullivan.theatlantic.com/the_daily_dish/2008/01/a-not-so-gay-di.html">Andrew Sullivan</a> was this: &#8220;The scientists are concerned that [the bacteria] could also soon gain ground in the general population.&#8221; To me, this is at worst laziness on the part of the press office: they didn&#8217;t translate the nerds&#8217; epi-shorthand (general population = everyone not in the sub-population we&#8217;re looking at) into poltically correct press-release speak. But to some in the gay community it was &#8220;toxic and homophobic&#8221;.</p>
<p>The storm has now sloshed over the edge of the tea-cup and may drown out decent science. UCSF has issued a <a href="http://pub.ucsf.edu/newsservices/releases//">revised press release</a> under the headline  &#8220;New multi-drug-resistant bacteria emerge in U.S. cities on both coasts&#8221;. Gay men don&#8217;t make an apperance until the second paragraph, and the suggestion that the bug could be sexually transmitted doesn&#8217;t make an appearance at all. I am shocked that the epidemiologists at UCSF allowed this revisionism. They did good work, and the results of that work suggest gay guys may need help in preventing staph. They are doing the gay community as well as themselves a disservice by kicking the dirt over their findings.</p>
<p>San Francisco&#8217;s <a href="http://www.sfdph.org/dph/default.asp">Department of Public Health</a> is a model of pragmatism, collecting and analysing data with dispassionate objectivity, and then getting on with putting necessary programmes in place with a minimum of fuss. But even they are <a href= "http://www.sfcdcp.org/index.cfm?id=100">pussy-footing around the MRSA issue</a>.</p>
<p>It strikes me that if there is one thing that is likely to increase homophobia, it is another unpleasant, communicable disease spreading widely among gay men. But it&#8217;s not inevitable. With staph as with any communicable disease, the earlier we start prevention efforts, the easier it will be to control. So instead of arguing about it, wouldn&#8217;t it be smarter to start doing something about it? </p>
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		<title>&#8220;Gay plague&#8221; hysteria: has AIDS taught us nothing?</title>
		<link>http://www.wisdomofwhores.com/2008/01/21/gay-plague-hysteria-has-aids-taught-us-nothing/</link>
		<comments>http://www.wisdomofwhores.com/2008/01/21/gay-plague-hysteria-has-aids-taught-us-nothing/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 21 Jan 2008 20:41:28 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>elizabeth</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Ideology and HIV]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Pisani's picks]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Science]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[MRSA]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[MSM]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Politically correct]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.wisdomofwhores.com/2008/01/21/gay-plague-hysteria-has-aids-taught-us-nothing/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Last week, Annals of Internal Medicine published an important paper on drug-resistant MRSA, a bug often spread in hospitals but in this case circulating in the population. Binh An Diep and colleagues report that gay men are 13 times more likely to have this strain of MRSA than other people. MRSA can manifest itself in [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Last week, Annals of Internal Medicine published an <a href="http://www.annals.org/cgi/content/full/0000605-200802190-00204v1"> important paper on drug-resistant MRSA</a>, a bug often spread in hospitals but in this case circulating in the population. Binh An Diep and colleagues report that gay men are 13 times more likely to have this strain of MRSA than other people. MRSA can manifest itself in lots of nasty ways, but in this population, boils and lesions around the genitals or on guys&#8217; bums were particularly common. The paper concludes that it is possible that the bug is being transmitted sexually among gay men, and it sensibly comments on necessary prevention measures.</p>
<p>Perhaps predictably, the report was picked up by the mainstream media as well as in the blogosphere. That stalwart of homophobia, the <a href="http://www.traditionalvalues.org/modules.php?sid=3232">Traditional Values Coalition</a>, rants on that the flesh-eating bug is reason enough to condemn homosexuality. &#8220;Homosexual sex is unnatural and results in a whole range of dangerous sexually transmitted diseases,&#8221; fulminates the TVC&#8217;s Andrea Lafferty. She&#8217;s off the mark &#8212; it is anal sex, not homosexual sex, that is &#8220;unnatural&#8221; (i.e. not naturally lubricated). This lack of lubcrication carries a higher chance of transmission for most STIs, whatever the gender of its practitioners. But let&#8217;s not let the facts get in the way of a good bit of gay bashing.</p>
<p>It is not the gay bashing that gives me this sickening feeling of deja vu. It is the reaction to it. Screeches of &#8220;homophobia&#8221;, &#8220;stigmatisation&#8221; etc etc have been leveled not just at the self-righteous, tub-thumping homophobes (who richly deserve being screeched at). They&#8217;ve been leveled too at the scientists who published the paper. And so has begun the &#8220;this can happen to anyone&#8221; backlash. The Centers for Disease Control, which financed part of the study, rushed out a <a href="http://www.cdc.gov/od/oc/media/pressrel/2008/t080116.htm">statement</a> saying that  MRSA &#8220;infections occur in men, women, adults, children, and persons of all races and sexual orientations, and are known to be transmitted by close skin-to-skin contact&#8221;. They question the suggestion that MRSA may be sexually transmitted between gay men.</p>
<p>We&#8217;ve made this mistake before. When a community chooses to engage in behaviours that spread infection, it is not helpful, or pretty, to stigmatise them for it. But AIDS ought also to have taught us that it is not helpful to ignore the facts and pretend that everyone is equally at risk. It&#8217;s true that gay men are not the only people to be infected with drug-resistant MRSA, but when members of your community are 13 times more likely to be infected than anyone else, you&#8217;d think you&#8217;d want to invest time and energy getting cracking on prevention, rather than whining that unpleasant religious zealots are being mean to you.</p>
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		<title>Huckabee was right (for the wrong reasons)</title>
		<link>http://www.wisdomofwhores.com/2007/12/10/huckabee-was-right-for-the-wrong-reasons/</link>
		<comments>http://www.wisdomofwhores.com/2007/12/10/huckabee-was-right-for-the-wrong-reasons/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 10 Dec 2007 19:42:43 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>elizabeth</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Ideology and HIV]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Pisani's picks]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Huckabee]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Politically correct]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[US Politics]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.wisdomofwhores.com/2007/12/10/huckabee-was-right-for-the-wrong-reasons/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[US Presidential candidate Mike Huckabee is refusing to suck back comments made in 1992 about isolating people with HIV, according to an AP report reprinted in the IHT. Web sites are buzzing with outrage: Huckabee wants to quarantine people with HIV. Shame! Despite his own, rather incompetent efforts to defend himself from that assertion on [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>US Presidential candidate Mike Huckabee is refusing to suck back comments made in 1992 about isolating people with HIV, according to an <a href="http://www.iht.com/articles/ap/2007/12/09/america/Huckabee.php">AP</a> report reprinted in the IHT.</p>
<p>Web sites are buzzing with outrage: Huckabee wants to quarantine people with HIV. Shame! Despite his own, rather incompetent efforts to defend himself from that assertion on Larry King (<a href="http://joemygod.blogspot.com/2007/12/huckabee-on-larry-king-takes-on-aids.html">videolink</a> from JoeMyGod), that is not, in fact, what he said in his <a href="http://hosted.ap.org/specials/interactives/wdc/documents/huckabee92senate.pdf">1992 interview </a> with AP. What he said was that AIDS was being treated differently from any other infectious disease in history. Which was, and continues to be true. What he said was that AIDS was being treated as a human rights issue instead of a health crisis. Which was, and continues to be true. He also pointed out that federal funding for AIDS research was disproportionate compared with other diseases on a per-case basis. That was true in the US at the time, and though I don&#8217;t know the comparable figures right now, I can say with confidence that spending on HIV by international donors and international organisations is in most continents disproportionate compared with other things that wreck health and happiness.<span id="more-87"></span></p>
<p>But why is HIV being treated as a human rights issue (in a way that SARS, avian flu and other infectious diseases are not)? In large part because of people like Huckabee. AIDS first came to the world&#8217;s attention among gay men in the United States. That would be the men that Huckabee said led an &#8220;aberrant, unnatural and sinful lifestyle&#8221;. His tub-thumping set the tone for the likes of Jesse Helms (who said HIV was spread by the &#8220;deliberate, disgusting, revolting conduct&#8221;  of gay men).  It was this  sort of prejudice that  forced gay communities into a corner, that forced them to organise HIV  prevention programmes because the government wasn&#8217;t doing it,  that forced them to  lobby loudly,  passionately and ultimately  successfully for  investment and protection of  basic  rights to employment,  insurance and treatment for people infected with HIV. In other words, it was people  like Huckabee who  created the  &#8220;AIDS  exceptionalism&#8221;  that Huckabee complains of.</p>
<p>That exceptionalism was exported to other continents as they faced (or more frequently failed to face) the HIV epidemic. In many parts of the world, and especially in sub-Saharan Africa where HIV is most deeply entrenched, it has become an obstacle to a sensible response. That&#8217;s in part because we continue to see a &#8220;Human Rights&#8221; approach and a &#8220;Public Health&#8221; approach as somehow inimicable &#8212; the furore over Huckabee&#8217;s dredged-up comments is a very good illustration of the polarity. But it is a false dichotomy. Staying alive is surely the most basic human right. If &#8220;classic&#8221; infectious disease control measures such as case finding, treatement, active provision of prevention services and partner notification help people to stay alive, if those measures help people to avoid contracting and passing on a fatal disease, then surely they promote the rights of the communities most threatened by fatal infectious diseases such as HIV.</p>
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		<title>LGBT: answers on a postcard please</title>
		<link>http://www.wisdomofwhores.com/2007/12/10/lgbt-answers-on-a-postcard-please/</link>
		<comments>http://www.wisdomofwhores.com/2007/12/10/lgbt-answers-on-a-postcard-please/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 10 Dec 2007 11:39:01 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>elizabeth</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Ideology and HIV]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Men, women and others]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[MSM]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Politically correct]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.wisdomofwhores.com/2007/12/10/lgbt-answers-on-a-postcard-please/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Commenting on Bullshit Bingo, Media Whore wonders what &#8220;LGBT&#8221; stands for. MW&#8217;s opening bid: Less Go Bed Togevver. Any better offers out there? As a hint, let me reproduce this gem from a recent UNAIDS publication on Men Who Have Sex With Men&#8221;: (pdf file, 703 kb) &#8220;While we use the term ‘men who have [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Commenting on <a href="http://www.wisdomofwhores.com/2007/12/01/talking-of-penises/">Bullshit Bingo</a>, Media Whore wonders what &#8220;LGBT&#8221; stands for. MW&#8217;s opening bid: Less Go Bed Togevver.  Any better offers out there?</p>
<p>As a hint, let me reproduce this gem from a recent <a href="http://www.ternyata.org/books/wisdom/MSM_the_missing_piece_UNAIDS.pdf">UNAIDS publication</a> on Men Who Have Sex With Men&#8221;: (pdf file, 703 kb)</p>
<p>&#8220;While we use the term ‘men who have sex with men’ here it is within the context of understanding that the word ‘man’/’men’ is socially constructed. Nor does its use imply that it is an identity term referring to an identifiable community that can be segregated and so labeled. Within the framework of male-to-male sex, there are a range of masculinities, along with diverse sexual and gender identities, communities, networks, and collectives, as well as just behaviours without any sense of affiliation to an identity or community.&#8221;</p>
<p>If you can get past the PC footnotes, the report is actually full of pretty good information about sex between men in Asia, drawing attention to rapidly rising infection rates among gay guys in many countries in the region.</p>
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