You did.
You said all gay people have HIV and AIDs, and they irresponsibly donate blood just so it costs the red cross and co. extra money to screen the samples.
No I didn't.
You simply revealed a lack of basic understanding and reading comprehension. All I did was state facts.
I never said all gay people have aids. Go back and read. I sad the percentage or the ratio of gay men with HIV/aids is tremendously higher. It's not my opinion or anyone else's. it is fact. It's not my own little idea. It's not a "bash." It's the truth. Next thing I know, you'll be starting a petition against doctors saying that smokers have higher rates of lung cancer.
I also never accused anyone of using the donation process to get free testing. However, once that entered the discussion, I did point out that if they did so, it's irresponsible and wrong. And apparently, those who were involved in massive donations and screening have concluded that's what was happening. I didn't say it. They did. You may not like it. That's too bad. It's just the way it is.
Learn to read and comprehend instead of ignorantly lashing out at anything that resembles a contradiction of your own pet beliefs, while simultaneously embarrassing yourself by failing to address the actual content of what was presented. Instead you judge intent, which isn't even what you think it is.
In spite of the evidence presented concerning:
A ) the scientific, factual truth th gay men have disproportionately higher HIV/aids than any other group
B ) the costs associated with the staffing, equipment, utilities, lab screen, etc. being too high to support continued sampling from this group, which ends up with most of its blood samples requiring destruction. Therefore little to no return on investment and not at all fiscally viable or responsible. (Separate and apart from the issue stardust brought up. This has nothing to do with those who would do this on purpose just to get a free std screen - which is quite obviously reprehensible)
C ) the danger of that much blood having to be screened from a group known to exhibit radically higher instances of life-threatening and quality of life lowering diseases is contradictory to the actual mission of taking said blood: saving lives. And labs are not infallible. Nor are the persons who work in them. There is possibility of "bad blood" being given the green light. And someone could be infected and needlessly suffer as a result. The more that probability is cut down, the better.
It's all common sense. But if you want to continue to pretend there is some ulterior motive, have at it. You've probably got nothing better to do.
Edited by Socalmuscle, 21 August 2013 - 11:20 PM.