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Charlie Sheen is HIV+

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His talk show couldn't find a cure though.

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Apparently I have been in hypersleep for some time now. Didn't know HIV was manageable. Still, if he knew he should go to jail for a loooong time.
 
Apparently I have been in hypersleep for some time now. Didn't know HIV was manageable. Still, if he knew he should go to jail for a loooong time.

Magic Johnson has been living with it for nearly 30 years with no real complications to speak of, but he's been 100% focused on taking care of himself since the moment he found out. Sheen might have other demons that could affect his ability to stay healthy.
 
Magic Johnson has been living with it for nearly 30 years with no real complications to speak of, but he's been 100% focused on taking care of himself since the moment he found out. Sheen might have other demons that could affect his ability to stay healthy.

Magic basically is the new old Cosby.

Less of a cunt thought.
 
Who forgets something like that??? How could you?
Yea I didn't get the other part of his argument either where getting tested and being diagnosed positive automatically brings shame and stigma, as if doctor-patient confidentiality is breached so often that people would rather get a terminal disease untreated.
 
Maybe MTV traumatized me when I was young, but I can't understand how its acceptable to have sex with someone without telling them you have HIV, people don't take anything seriously these days.
 
Maybe MTV traumatized me when I was young, but I can't understand how its acceptable to have sex with someone without telling them you have HIV, people don't take anything seriously these days.

It's pretty fucking awful. I knew an HIV+ sex worker who gleefully told me the best part of her day was having unprotected sex with cheap guys to teach them a lessen.

I just couldn't respond to that.
 
You definitely can pass it it would just be a lot more unlikely.

Studies have shown that the risk is pretty much zero, or very, very, very close to it, provided he is adherent with his medication. Many doctors just don't want to say absolute zero for obvious reasons. Many reputable doctors don't even recommend Prep for sero-discordant (one HIV+, the other is HIV-) couple so long as the HIV+ partner is adherent and has an undetectable viral load.

The problem with Charlie is that he doesn't seem to be on any medications since he looks like he is wasting away.
 
Perhaps if it happened with one person... However, there are people out there who have sex with multiple partners and don't disclose to any of them that they have HIV, thus putting those people are risk, and then any people those people have had sex with at risk. That's goes beyond a simple mistake and starts falling into the criminal activity area.

I mean, with the right steps, you could sleep with a thousand people and are insanely unlikely to infect them. It's like a fraction of a fraction of a single percent. The percentages are much, much higher with anal sex, though and this is Charlie Sheen we're talking about.

It's definitely a moral obligation.
 
Maybe MTV traumatized me when I was young, but I can't understand how its acceptable to have sex with someone without telling them you have HIV, people don't take anything seriously these days.

It's not acceptable. A lot of posters continue to undermine the seriousness of the disease, effectively equating a low risk of transmission as "zero risk" thereby justifying the idea that not disclosing to someone that you are HIV+ is deserved autonomy that would otherwise be nulled if you informed someone they risked infection.

I just...can't agree with that kind of thinking. At all.
 
It's pretty fucking awful. I knew an HIV+ sex worker who gleefully told me the best part of her day was having unprotected sex with cheap guys to teach them a lessen.

I just couldn't respond to that.

Fucking hell.

Because you deserve hell if you're cheap.
 
It's not acceptable. A lot of posters continue to undermine the seriousness of the disease, effectively equating a low risk of transmission as "zero risk" thereby justifying the idea that not disclosing to someone that you are HIV+ is deserved autonomy that would otherwise be nulled if you informed someone they risked infection.

I just...can't agree with that kind of thinking. At all.

Not everybody pointing that out is suggesting it's okay not inform your partner.

The fact of the matter is, the risk is virtually zero. You probably take bigger risks with your health every single day. That fact is important information for this discussion, even if it doesn't change the fact that you should inform.
 
Studies have shown that the risk is pretty much zero, or very, very, very close to it, provided he is adherent with his medication. Many doctors just don't want to say absolute zero for obvious reasons. Many reputable doctors don't even recommend Prep for sero-discordant (one HIV+, the other is HIV-) couple so long as the HIV+ partner is adherent and has an undetectable viral load.

The problem with Charlie is that he doesn't seem to be on any medications since he looks like he is wasting away.

Even if the risk is zero, it shouldn't be the infected determine the amount of risk his partner is willing to take. People aren't logical creatures, but their emotions have value. It is dishonest to lie or not disclose something like that to a sexual partner just because you'd deem any rejection due to it as irrational.
 
Studies have shown that the risk is pretty much zero, or very, very, very close to it, provided he is adherent with his medication. Many doctors just don't want to say absolute zero for obvious reasons. Many reputable doctors don't even recommend Prep for sero-discordant (one HIV+, the other is HIV-) couple so long as the HIV+ partner is adherent and has an undetectable viral load.

The problem with Charlie is that he doesn't seem to be on any medications since he looks like he is wasting away.

Charlie is a drug addict. Being HIV+ and indulging in cocaine, alcohol and other things damaging to your immune system is really fucking inadvisable.

I doubt very much he is HIV+ and NOT on that medication.
 
HIV medecine is crazy expensive. At least 1000 a bottle a month if you want to be in good health. It's hard enough knowing you have it, but some just shut off and dont mention it to the last partner. That person may stop, some will continue knowing full well he or she is contagious, and thus the chain continue

And look at this bitch saying she gave HIV to half the city. This is how it gets spread out.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OSucdF__6AQ
 
Even if the risk is zero, it shouldn't be the infected determine the amount of risk his partner is willing to take. People aren't logical creatures, but their emotions have value. It is dishonest to lie or not disclose something like that to a sexual partner just because you'd deem any rejection due to it as irrational.

I'm not saying that the HIV+ person shouldn't disclose. Quite the opposite actually. But the calls for criminalizing it is counter-intuitive.

If you are the receptive partner, just assume that everyone is lying about their status and get on PrEP and use condoms. We have the tools and knowledge now that we didn't have 25+ years ago. It's time we use it.
 
It's even worse with the stuff the defenders like Brain is linking to. Here is one of the paper's major stated issues with criminalizing non-disclosure.

- undermine the ability of people living with HIV to be autonomous, responsible adults and
perpetuate the mentality of victimhood and powerlessness.

Basically, it's complete horseshit that assumes all people are good and nice and will do the right thing and disclose without the law. The entire paper is rife with this sort of nonsense. This is his big "see, the lawyers think it's a bad idea." Of course, the great "victimhood" and lack of autonomy here is their right to not have to tell sexual partners that they're infected with a communicable and life-altering disease. Basically, the paper states that it is the HIV+ person's right to potentially infect another person and stripping them of that right re-victimizes them.

Did you even read the article I linked, or did you just skim through it looking for sentences you could take out of context to fit your "holy shit look at these PC nutjobs" narrative?

The sentence you quoted is actually arguing *for* criminal penalties in very select cases.
 
I'm not saying that the HIV+ person shouldn't disclose. Quite the opposite actually. But the calls for criminalizing it is counter-intuitive.

If you are the receptive partner, just assume that everyone is lying about their status and get on PrEP and use condoms. We have the tools and knowledge now that we didn't have 25+ years ago. It's time we use it.

Most of the outrage in this thread doesn't seem to be the idea of criminalization of knowing HIV infection (which is counterintuitive except in rarer, malicious cases) but on the idea that disclosing is a choice that the infected partner has.

You should ask and assume your partner is lying, but if infected, you have an obligation to tell your partner, even if you're using condoms and/or your viral load is undetectable. It's not your choice to weigh the risk.
 
It's pretty fucking awful. I knew an HIV+ sex worker who gleefully told me the best part of her day was having unprotected sex with cheap guys to teach them a lessen.

I just couldn't respond to that.
here's a response, next time tell her she's an evil cunt
 
I can pull together some more links, and I might later, but simple question to the majority of posters in this thread: if HIV transmission/non-disclosure criminalization is such a great idea, why is it that so few HIV prevention/treatment organizations support it? Have they just fallen under the sway of disease-spreading PC extremists or what?
 
http://www.tmz.com/2015/11/16/charlie-sheen-hiv/

the announcement is that he no longer has detectable levels of HIV

Charlie Sheen has had HIV for years ... but his position now is that he beat the disease because it's undetectable in his system ... TMZ has learned.
Our sources say Charlie has known for more than 2 years that he was HIV positive ... and one source says he's known way longer than that. We're told Charlie was taking meds for the HIV and has had a series of blood tests, and over time, the HIV has been "undetectable" in his system.
We're told Charlie freely admits he's had scores of sexual partners over the years, many of whom had intimate relations with him after his diagnosis. The implication here is clear ... Charlie is saying he didn't deceive anyone, since the blood tests did not reveal the presence of HIV.
Doctors beg to differ and say once someone has HIV they have it for life, at least until medicine advances.
 
I can pull together some more links, and I might later, but simple question to the majority of posters in this thread: if HIV transmission/non-disclosure criminalization is such a great idea, why is it that so few HIV prevention/treatment organizations support it? Have they just fallen under the sway of disease-spreading PC extremists or what?

I think it's necessary. You don't need to label yourself as a sex offender to survive. To have socially responsible intercourse, you should disclose the information. You can likely live without it, and not ruin lives. If you feel you can't, you have a problem.
 
I'm not saying that the HIV+ person shouldn't disclose. Quite the opposite actually. But the calls for criminalizing it is counter-intuitive.

If you are the receptive partner, just assume that everyone is lying about their status and get on PrEP and use condoms. We have the tools and knowledge now that we didn't have 25+ years ago. It's time we use it.
This line of though remind me of victim blaming.

"He should have used a condom", "She shouldn't have trusted what he said".

If you are willfully punting people at risk, it sure as hell should be a crime. Is it too much to expect some common courtesy?
 
I can pull together some more links, and I might later, but simple question to the majority of posters in this thread: if HIV transmission/non-disclosure criminalization is such a great idea, why is it that so few HIV prevention/treatment organizations support it? Have they just fallen under the sway of disease-spreading PC extremists or what?

I don't necessarily agree with HIV criminalization, but I wouldn't go to HIV organizations as some sort of moral authority on any matter, given organizations like AHF's repugnant relationship with PrEP.
 
Again, what part does personal responsibility play into this?

I see all you railing on either A) blaming the infected person for not disclosing or B) defending the infected persons right to not disclose, but what about the nonpoz person? Does just the fact alone that he didn't get told absolve him of all responsibility? No. He's just as much at fault for fucking someone who's poz if he didn't at least ask.

Just because you didn't get told doesn't suddenly make you completely faultless. You chose to stick your dick in it just as much as anyone else.

This isn't just about the person not telling - it's also about the nonpoz (now poz) person being just as fucking stupid and not protecting themselves. To absolve them of all responsibility as well is disgusting. To lay the blame at only the poz person's feet is disingenuous at best.

If someone knowingly put me at risk, I'd do everything I could to see them sent to prison.
 
Even if the risk is zero, it shouldn't be the infected determine the amount of risk his partner is willing to take. People aren't logical creatures, but their emotions have value. It is dishonest to lie or not disclose something like that to a sexual partner just because you'd deem any rejection due to it as irrational.

But should the person be morally reprehensed when the risk is fairly nonexistent? If the risk is most likely close/or zero under normal circumstances, shouldnt we think for a minute and not judge so severely those people who dont disclose? Doesnt this fear comes from wrong ideas and prejudices?.

Is an HIV+ person devoided of her right for privacy once she has adquired HIV+? Should she carry the stigma of her disease in every one of her sexual encounters? Should she just "deal with it"? Those are things to consider too, when we have this type of dicussion.

Is it fair to label them as uncaring monsters when they are taking care of their health, use a condom and dont disclose just out of fear and/or embarrassment?. Disclosure is preferable, the morally correct option but most of society aint give a fuck about that.

http://www.tmz.com/2015/11/16/charlie-sheen-hiv/

the announcement is that he no longer has HIV

the cure was in Charlie´s blood all along. #winning

What a weird way to twist yourself out of responsability.
 
They aren't monsters. They just become scumbags/criminals once they fail to disclose a life altering illness with an innocent party.

It's not privacy any longer when you involve another party.
 
But should the person be morally reprehensed when the risk is fairly nonexistent? If the risk is most likely close/or zero under normal circumstances, shouldnt we think for a minute and not judge so severely those people who dont disclose? Doesnt this fear comes from wrong ideas and prejudices?.

Is an HIV+ person devoided of her right for privacy once she has adquired HIV+? Should she carry the stigma of her disease in every one of her sexual encounters? Should she just "deal with it"? Those are things to consider too, when we have this type of dicussion.

Is it fair to label them as uncaring monsters when they are taking care of their health, use a condom and dont disclose just out of fear and/or embarrassment?. Disclosure is preferable, the morally correct option but most of society aint give a fuck about that.

Abso-fucking-lutely. I have had HIV scares before. I understand the risk. Disclosure is not "preferable". It is necessary.

Again -- why does the HIV+ person get to make the judgment call for the HIV- person? It is up the HIV- to weigh the options once they know their partner's HIV+ status. It's not "privacy" because it shouldn't be up to you to make that choice for your partner, even if the risk is low.

We can debate the merits of HIV criminalization all day. That's more interesting. This is no-brainer, and I'm appalled that you're suggesting it's understandable not to disclose someone's HIV status to their partner.
 
I don't necessarily agree with HIV criminalization, but I wouldn't go to HIV organizations as some sort of moral authority on any matter, given organizations like AHF's repugnant relationship with PrEP.

AHF is repugnant in myriad ways, but I fail to see how their repugnance reflects on the credibility of other HIV/AIDS organizations in any way. Like the HIV Medical Association, for instance.

http://www.hivma.org/uploadedFiles/HIVMA/FINAL HIVMA Policy Statement on HIV Criminalization.pdf
 
I'm not gonna wade into the rest of the discussion, but please people if you're gonna have unprotected sex with anyone go to a free clinic and get yourselves both tested first.
 
This line of though remind me of victim blaming.

"He should have used a condom", "She shouldn't have trusted what he said".

If you are willfully punting people at risk, it sure as hell should be a crime. Is it too much to expect some common courtesy?

Who puts you more at risk: someone who is HIV positive but on medication with an undetectable viral load or someone who doesn't know their status?

Why would you criminalise one but not the other?
 
I once had sex with an undetected HIV+ guy, with tons of condoms involved. He was just really horny / drunk / drugged and he forgot. It happens, your limbic system would do the trick for you.Then he disclosed after we finished. I shamed him for it. A lot. I was ignorant of many things, that I now thankfully understand. Putting an HIV person in jail when theres not a clear, "homicidal" attempt to infect the other person is wrong in my personal point of view. And the severity of the laws making such behavior a criminal offense have a background on prejudice. There should be consequences, but not as severe. Thats all the point I am trying to put across.

yeah man let's cape for spreading HIV that quilt needs to be a little bigger, huh?

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I don't necessarily agree with HIV criminalization, but I wouldn't go to HIV organizations as some sort of moral authority on any matter, given organizations like AHF's repugnant relationship with PrEP.
That's a bizarre choice, given that AHF's position was one rejected by almost the entire HIV medical establishment. Like HIV criminalization.
 
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