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phobun
12-08-2010, 05:05 PM
Yesterday Julian Assange stepped into the prosecutorial meatgrinder for not wearing a rubber during consensual sex.

Now Derrick Burts, a 24 year old LA based porn actor who contracted HIV, is calling for mandatory condom use in porn. Does anyone doubt that the paternalistic California legistlature will act on this suggestion?

Pretty soon a guy will face government-mandated encapsulation, like the bubble boy, just to get laid. God help you if your partner is exposed to the resident bacteria on your skin. And there will be no more eating pussy either: it will be too dangerous per the nanny state.

http://www.latimes.com/health/la-me-porn-hiv-20101208,0,5306958.story

Dino Velvet
12-08-2010, 05:23 PM
I miss the 1980s when you could take a gal out drinking then drag her off to your place when she had that weakened and confused look in her eyes and bang her on your living room floor while she was passed out lying in her own puke. Most of these ladies were considerate enough to avoid you the next day at work and a few were even kind enough to quit on short notice and leave town so there's no awkward dealings. It's 2010 now and some people frown on that behavior.

hippifried
12-08-2010, 06:12 PM
Sweden just has a brain freeze. They need to get out of their igloos more, & quit frying everything in seal blubber.

We're not Swedes. We're not Europeans. A State can't regulate the porn industry without recognizing it as legit. Call it art if you like, but it's still sex for pay. Years ago, there was an argument between Ron Jeremy & some dude that ran a Nevada brothel over whether porn was prostitution. It ended up on that lame show "Moral Court". Jeremy lost. There's not going to be a legal ban on barebacking. The industry's actually done a pretty good job of limiting exposure to HIV, & promoting safer sex. This pops up every now & then. There's no reason to think anything different is going to happen now. Most politicians are so uptight, they turn to jello at the mere mention of sex. This Burts dude knew the risks when he took all those big bare bones up his ass.

NatashaLover
12-08-2010, 10:20 PM
Very Good! I thought they were mandatory already.

african1
12-08-2010, 11:12 PM
I miss the 1980s when you could take a gal out drinking then drag her off to your place when she had that weakened and confused look in her eyes and bang her on your living room floor while she was passed out lying in her own puke. Most of these ladies were considerate enough to avoid you the next day at work and a few were even kind enough to quit on short notice and leave town so there's no awkward dealings. It's 2010 now and some people frown on that behavior.

yeah Bro..those were the good ole' days.

Don't forget groping a tit whenever you felt like it. This New world is crazy.

http://www.motifake.com/image/demotivational-poster/0809/groping-grandpa-cubby-demotivational-poster-1222558624.jpg

runround04
12-09-2010, 05:16 AM
Surprised its not already, OSHA freaks out about everything esle, it would seem that STD's could be considered a work place hazard for the industry and anyone working there would have to wear "safety gear". Other jobs get hard hats, steel toe boots, safety harnesses ect...

OR

you give HIV to someone at work, ya brought outback and shot......

GrimFusion
12-09-2010, 05:56 AM
Yesterday Julian Assange stepped into the prosecutorial meatgrinder for not wearing a rubber during consensual sex.

Now Derrick Burts, a 24 year old LA based porn actor who contracted HIV, is calling for mandatory condom use in porn. Does anyone doubt that the paternalistic California legistlature will act on this suggestion?

In the case of Julian Assange, condom use isn't the issue at all. It's an excuse to pull him into custody and question him. If it weren't his local DA would have prosecuted him shortly after the complaint was submitted, but the case was initially dismissed because of lack of evidence.

I think that condom use in the porn industry is a very good idea, but I'm not about to jump the bandwagon and push for it. Why? Porn actors have a job to preform. That job can still be preformed with a condom, so the other side of this debate is just bitching about comfort. Is comfort really worth the inevitable STD infection even if it is a rare deal? I think it's a clear choice and most Americans would agree.

nbtch101
12-09-2010, 12:37 PM
Sweden just has a brain freeze. They need to get out of their igloos more, & quit frying everything in seal blubber.



Erhm.. I think you have us confused with eskimos, or something.:fu: Silly american..

phobun
12-09-2010, 05:37 PM
We're not Swedes. We're not Europeans. A State can't regulate the porn industry without recognizing it as legit. Call it art if you like, but it's still sex for pay. Years ago, there was an argument between Ron Jeremy & some dude that ran a Nevada brothel over whether porn was prostitution. It ended up on that lame show "Moral Court". Jeremy lost. There's not going to be a legal ban on barebacking. The industry's actually done a pretty good job of limiting exposure to HIV, & promoting safer sex. This pops up every now & then. There's no reason to think anything different is going to happen now. Most politicians are so uptight, they turn to jello at the mere mention of sex. This Burts dude knew the risks when he took all those big bare bones up his ass.


Good point. Sort of puts the state in a Catch 22 situation. And Burts should have recognized the risks.


In the case of Julian Assange, condom use isn't the issue at all. It's an excuse to pull him into custody and question him. If it weren't his local DA would have prosecuted him shortly after the complaint was submitted, but the case was initially dismissed because of lack of evidence.

I think that condom use in the porn industry is a very good idea, but I'm not about to jump the bandwagon and push for it. Why? Porn actors have a job to preform. That job can still be preformed with a condom, so the other side of this debate is just bitching about comfort. Is comfort really worth the inevitable STD infection even if it is a rare deal? I think it's a clear choice and most Americans would agree.


Good points. They clearly are using this as an opportunity to put him away. And the article indicates that he had already contracted gonorrhea, chlamydia and herpes prior to getting HIV. At that rate, even a person lacking a forebrain might have had enough sense to recognize that he was dancing naked in a minefield.

DarylWashington
12-09-2010, 06:00 PM
I'm resistant to all STDs so I don't have to use condoms!

BellaBellucci
12-09-2010, 08:47 PM
And there will be no more eating pussy either: it will be too dangerous per the nanny state.

What do you care? Post-op pussy doesn't secrete any fluids. :geek: :lol:

~BB~

rockabilly
12-09-2010, 08:51 PM
What do you care? Post-op pussy doesn't secrete any fluids. :geek: :lol:

~BB~

Dryer than the Sahara huh.

DarylWashington
12-10-2010, 03:45 AM
What do you care? Post-op pussy doesn't secrete any fluids. :geek: :lol:

~BB~

Haha

sunairco
12-10-2010, 07:21 AM
Sweden just has a brain freeze. They need to get out of their igloos more, & quit frying everything in seal blubber.

We're not Swedes. We're not Europeans. A State can't regulate the porn industry without recognizing it as legit. Call it art if you like, but it's still sex for pay. Years ago, there was an argument between Ron Jeremy & some dude that ran a Nevada brothel over whether porn was prostitution. It ended up on that lame show "Moral Court". Jeremy lost. There's not going to be a legal ban on barebacking. The industry's actually done a pretty good job of limiting exposure to HIV, & promoting safer sex. This pops up every now & then. There's no reason to think anything different is going to happen now. Most politicians are so uptight, they turn to jello at the mere mention of sex. This Burts dude knew the risks when he took all those big bare bones up his ass.


I thought that issue was settled after the Meese commission and the crackdown on the porn industry after the Lords thing. The Feds and local law enforcement contended that Pandering became the equivalent of prostitution on the basis if you procured talent to work in a porn movie for pay, it amounted to the same thing. The Freeman case appeal overturned that to what amounts as the actors are paid talent and differ from sex workers. They tried pulling that again down here in Fl in two cases where they nailed a webmaster and in another case one of these houses where people are under 24/7 streaming video.

natina
12-10-2010, 01:20 PM
if they use the glands of the penis or supporting organs

i.e. the prostate,Cowper's gland etc.,


they are a few new surgeries that provide lube.

there are some issue with it though.

oh! and yes post op pussy can get an STD,one reason is many doc's put mucosa tissue in the post op vagina to create self lubrication.


http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/3/35/Male_anatomy.png


What do you care? Post-op pussy doesn't secrete any fluids. :geek: :lol:

~BB~

natina
12-10-2010, 01:27 PM
Antibiotic Resistant Gonorrhea

http://www.cdc.gov/std/gonorrhea/arg/default.htm


Antibiotic-Resistant Bacteria


http://std.about.com/od/glossary/g/antiresgloss.htm



Incurable gonorrhea may be next superbug

Some strains of STD showing signs of becoming resistant to all treatments


http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/36229547/ns/health-sexual_health/



An alarming new superbug may be on its way — an incurable form of gonorrhea. The disease, once easily killed with a shot of penicillin, is increasingly becoming drug-resistant. Soon, the world may face a version that can’t be killed by any known antibiotic, warned Catherine Ison, the director of the sexually transmitted bacteria reference library with the United Kingdom’s Health (http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/36229547/ns/health-sexual_health/#) Protection Agency.
In recent years, as the disease has evolved, medications once proven to kill the bacteria have become less effective except one, a class of antibiotics called cephalosporins. Now some strains of gonorrhea are showing signs of being resistant to even that, Ison told those at a scientific meeting last week in Edinburgh, Scotland.
"If this problem isn't addressed, there's a very real possibility that gonorrhea will become a very difficult infection to treat," she said.
Gonorrhea is the second most commonly reported infectious disease in the United States. In 2008, there were 336,742 official cases, but this number, the most recent available from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, may vastly underestimate the true number.
“We will probably have something like 700,000 cases of gonorrhea this year,” suggested Dr. Edward W. Hook, professor of medicine (http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/36229547/ns/health-sexual_health/#) at the University of Alabama at Birmingham and an expert on STD infections.
Not all of those who are infected know it, contributing to the problem. Undiagnosed cases, or infections that are unsuccessfully treated and then linger without obvious symptoms, can create serious health problems. For example, teenage girls between 15 and 19 account for more cases than any other age group. If they aren’t cured, they risk pelvic inflammatory disease, infertility or ectopic pregnancies. People infected with gonorrhea are also about three times more likely to become infected with HIV should they come into contact with the virus.
“The other major cost is infection of children born to infected mothers,” Hook explained. “And rarely you can get gonorrheal infections of heart valves, and arthritis (http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/36229547/ns/health-sexual_health/#).”
History of being hard to treat
Gonorrhea has a long history of evading medicine’s attempts to cure it. In the 1930s, sulfa-based drugs worked, but soon lost potency as the bacteria adapted. Penicillin came up to bat in the 1940s. In New York City, Los Angeles, and points in between, posters appeared stating “Penicillin Cures Gonorrhea in 4 Hours,” sometimes underneath words urging citizens to buy war bonds to “Thrash the Axis.”
Just as defeating Hitler and the Japanese emperor had become an all-consuming national priority, health officials, armed with the new miracle drug penicillin (http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/36229547/ns/health-sexual_health/#), offered hope that the scourge of “VD” could be wiped out, too.
Penicillin was a miracle, but eventually doctors had to use more and more to kill the bug. Still, a shot of penicillin remained the treatment of choice until 1985, when rising resistance to penicillin, and the fact that many people are allergic to it, forced health officials to give other antibiotics their turns.

BigDF
12-10-2010, 01:58 PM
The charges against Julian Assange are clearly the best thing they could come up with against him for exposing all the secret shit. Making any sort of law about condom use just invites the government into our bedrooms and sex lives even more than they are in there now. In the porn industry, condoms are Personal Protective Equipment for the performers and should be treated as necessary for job safety, just as the machining industry uses safety glasses and steel toed shoes as PPE. I would support a rule that came through OSHA for the protection of performers, but only that narrow application. I find the law under which Assange was charged somewhat ridiculous and again a violation of personal freedom.

african1
12-10-2010, 04:17 PM
I'm resistant to all STDs so I don't have to use condoms!

You sound like Zuma. He raped an HIV positive relative and said that taking a shower right after the act protected him from contracting the disease. :whoa

african1
12-10-2010, 04:19 PM
Antibiotic Resistant Gonorrhea

http://www.cdc.gov/std/gonorrhea/arg/default.htm


Antibiotic-Resistant Bacteria


http://std.about.com/od/glossary/g/antiresgloss.htm



Incurable gonorrhea may be next superbug

Some strains of STD showing signs of becoming resistant to all treatments


http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/36229547/ns/health-sexual_health/



An alarming new superbug may be on its way — an incurable form of gonorrhea. The disease, once easily killed with a shot of penicillin, is increasingly becoming drug-resistant. Soon, the world may face a version that can’t be killed by any known antibiotic, warned Catherine Ison, the director of the sexually transmitted bacteria reference library with the United Kingdom’s Health (http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/36229547/ns/health-sexual_health/#) Protection Agency.
In recent years, as the disease has evolved, medications once proven to kill the bacteria have become less effective except one, a class of antibiotics called cephalosporins. Now some strains of gonorrhea are showing signs of being resistant to even that, Ison told those at a scientific meeting last week in Edinburgh, Scotland.
"If this problem isn't addressed, there's a very real possibility that gonorrhea will become a very difficult infection to treat," she said.
Gonorrhea is the second most commonly reported infectious disease in the United States. In 2008, there were 336,742 official cases, but this number, the most recent available from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, may vastly underestimate the true number.
“We will probably have something like 700,000 cases of gonorrhea this year,” suggested Dr. Edward W. Hook, professor of medicine (http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/36229547/ns/health-sexual_health/#) at the University of Alabama at Birmingham and an expert on STD infections.
Not all of those who are infected know it, contributing to the problem. Undiagnosed cases, or infections that are unsuccessfully treated and then linger without obvious symptoms, can create serious health problems. For example, teenage girls between 15 and 19 account for more cases than any other age group. If they aren’t cured, they risk pelvic inflammatory disease, infertility or ectopic pregnancies. People infected with gonorrhea are also about three times more likely to become infected with HIV should they come into contact with the virus.
“The other major cost is infection of children born to infected mothers,” Hook explained. “And rarely you can get gonorrheal infections of heart valves, and arthritis (http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/36229547/ns/health-sexual_health/#).”
History of being hard to treat
Gonorrhea has a long history of evading medicine’s attempts to cure it. In the 1930s, sulfa-based drugs worked, but soon lost potency as the bacteria adapted. Penicillin came up to bat in the 1940s. In New York City, Los Angeles, and points in between, posters appeared stating “Penicillin Cures Gonorrhea in 4 Hours,” sometimes underneath words urging citizens to buy war bonds to “Thrash the Axis.”
Just as defeating Hitler and the Japanese emperor had become an all-consuming national priority, health officials, armed with the new miracle drug penicillin (http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/36229547/ns/health-sexual_health/#), offered hope that the scourge of “VD” could be wiped out, too.
Penicillin was a miracle, but eventually doctors had to use more and more to kill the bug. Still, a shot of penicillin remained the treatment of choice until 1985, when rising resistance to penicillin, and the fact that many people are allergic to it, forced health officials to give other antibiotics their turns.


Sex caused us to dominate the world, and sex will be our demise. :(

african1
12-10-2010, 04:20 PM
Dryer than the Sahara huh.


Spit on it.

http://www.freeqporno.com/thumbs/240x180/366/730324/15.jpg

DarylWashington
12-10-2010, 05:21 PM
You sound like Zuma. He raped an HIV positive relative and said that taking a shower right after the act protected him from contracting the disease. :whoa

Smart man!