Gayness and HIV blamed on the Internet
Pink pounding
THE INTERNET PROMOTES GAYNESS and increases the risk of contracting HIV, according to a British news channel.
More4News, a programme hosted by Britain’s Channel 4, slams the Internet and social not-working sites as places where “Thousands of gay men risk getting HIV through internet organised "bareback" sex”, and reckons that contemporary technology has made extreme forms of sexual behaviour a normalcy.
Channel Four is, of course, justly famous for its low-key, sober programming including such family friendly viewing as Penis Week, Wank Week and the seminal gay drama Queer as Folk.
The sensationalist hyped up drivel, purporting to report on the dot.com decade, attempts to prove its point by mentioning that on sites like Gaydar and other “gay hook-up websites”, men can search for partners by hair colour, eye colour, height, weight or penis size. Totally unlike any heterosexual dating site on the internet, of course.
The report also melodramatically decries the amount of men advertising their preference for “bareback” sex (sex without a condom), noting that the Health Protection Agency has warned that a super strain of HIV could be spread if an already HIV positive individual is infected with a different strain of the virus. Blame the Internet of course, not a lack of education on the subject.
More4 News also reckons that the Internet has revolutionized gay life, bizarrely staking the claim that gays don’t even have to leave home to find sexual partners anymore, making gay clubs and bars obsolete. Again, strange how heterosexuals, who also, to the best of our knowledge, have access to the Internet, still choose to go out to clubs, bars and parties to find partners, for casual sex or otherwise. Perhaps More4 News is accusing gays of acute laziness rather than just plain old fashioned sexual deviancy?
The bigoted news site even has the nerve to preach that social networks aimed at the gay community should “stand as a warning to society”. It likewise laughably puts forward the view that the ability to locate sexual partners willing to act out what it clearly sees as perverted behaviour, has only become possible with the advent of Internet technology. Yes, and video games turn children into serial killing, war embracing psychos too.
If anything, what More4News fails to “report”, is that the Internet can be an incredibly useful tool in all that pertains to educating people about the risks of STDs and dangerous or risky sexual practices. People, and especially teens, who once had no one to turn to ask their “embarrassing” questions, can now simply search for, and receive answers in seconds.
So when it comes to pinning the blame for what narrow minded people see as deviancy, here’s a thought; lets blame the parents, lets blame the lack of comprehensive sex education, lets blame the sensationalist media hype, the entertainment agency and organized religion. But, for crying out loud, surely not the Internet? µ
L’Inq
Channel
4 News

Comments
You dancin'?
Can't we blame it on the boogie?I can confirm this
The more I visit The Inquirer, the more I find fat hairy men in tights attractive.It increases everyone's risk...
As an IT major at the University of Minnesota I see more and more IT guys score thanks to meeting girls on facebook...Facebook = More STDs
But none of them are complaining... :D
Al Gore Invented the Internet -> then AIDS
The AIDS crisis exploded entirely before the internet was broadly available to civilians. It has been under control ever since--in fact, it's worst in countries WITHOUT good internet access.The barebackers who want sex on the internet (those dirty gays! us straight people would never do that!), as far as I know, sort themselves by HIV status so as not to increase the spread of the disease.
Not Accurate!
The internet contains homosexual content that keeps the ball rolling but what starts it all is a total release of inhibition. Individuals use drugs to handle peer pressure and results in total loss of control on your morality either involuntary or voluntary.The peers defence after a victim's complaint "What happened last night?" is this question to the victim: "Did you have fun?" If the vic answer yes or I don't know, the reply is usually "What are you complaining about then?"
Then everybody that was there labels you gay or whatever other label exists that would apply to your unknown actions by yourself under the influence.
wtf
I think I watched the same program as the author, but whoah, I don't interpret it anywhere near the same (granted I was only watching it over my shoulder, while dossing on the internet).It was shown as part of the "internet" anniversery week or something (ch4 had covered the dot-com bubble in the same week).
I think the main point was that gay men now use the internet to avoid homophobic interactions, or just to bypass the whole gay-club scene. Certainly don't remember anything about the internet actually making you gay.
Noobs!
I love your site, I love your rants, I love your perspectives!Your witty insights easy my day!
I ran into some homophobic issues at my college today which really stressed me.. Hearing this out of *your* mouth is soothing.
Thanks!!!