luminum I saw you wrote you weren't positive or dating or knew anyone positive. I know you are just saying what the "facts" are but it's such a different story when you're in it. I could also read a bunch of stuff that doesn't involve me and have an opinion but I much rather hear from people who have been there. I'm not saying your opinion doesn't count but it's all facts and no experience.
I suppose, but that doesn't mean that people who "lived it" and who state their opinions AS facts should go unquestioned. Can you have a safe sexual relationship with someone who has HIV? Yes, and I wrote about how and it's easy. Should HIV+ people be allowed to seek relationships with uninfected people? Some of you listed reasons why they shouldn't ("Because it's unsafe and will pass along the virus.") and I wrote about why it isn't unsafe if you take the right precaution.
No one is refuting individual issues with being in a relationship with an HIV+ partner. If rollex only wants to have bareback sex, then it's fine for him not to want to seek an HIV+ partner. If you were hurt and betrayed by someone with HIV and scared by the kind of danger he put you in by not telling you and never want to date another person with HIV, then that's fine. If holycrap just cannot get passed the looming fear of HIV contraction, then me telling him that safe sex is easy won't do much good for him anyway. All of those personal reasons, rational or irrational, are fine.
But to me, none of those reasons are valid justification for believing that HIV+ people shouldn't be allowed to seek relationships with uninfected people, because some people use condoms out of habit, some people are reassured by the effectiveness of safe sex, some HIV+ people are upfront and safe with their status and their sexual practices instead of deceptive and selfish.
In the realm of emotion, common sense means little, I know, but for the record, that's part of the truth of the situation. The human condition and abstraction is a part of the truth of life, that no matter what anyone can say or tell you about safe sex, you still won't feel safe having sex with someone who is HIV+. That's a valid part of a person's thought process. But it should be acknowledged that with the proper precautions, the objective risk in that situation is near 0. And if we're going to talk about discriminating (perhaps not maliciously) against HIV+ people, then we need to be mindful of the justifications we're using and which ones aren't going to work.
I may not like it, but there are some straight people who, even if you tell them that gay men are like everyone else, even if they see that gay men are diverse and are not 'diseased', still won't feel comfortable or accepting toward them. I can't do anything more to dissuade that fear, and I accept it as a valid and unchangeable part of someone's beliefs, but I will always point out that what they fear is different from the truth, that gay men are like everyone else and are human beings. That says something. It's the same with fear of HIV+ individuals and the reality of safe sex.