HIV







































Acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) is a fatal disease that shows no symptoms for long periods and is usually spread or contracted unknowingly. Contrary to claims that condom use during intercourse is “safe sex,” even their most glowing advocates must admit that these devices work, at best, only 88 percent of the time – that users have more than a ten percent chance of catching a 100 percent fatal disease. Other studies indicate a mere 70 percent success rate for condoms – a nearly one in three risk of contracting HIV.

There exists direct evidence of voids in condom rubber. Electron micrographs reveal voids of 5 microns in size (50 times larger than the virus) while fracture mechanics analyses, sensitive to the largest flaws present, suggest inherent flaws as large as the [sic] 50 microns (500 times the size of the virus).”

Over the course of a year, the average woman whose partner uses condoms has a one in six chance of becoming pregnant. The chance of contracting AIDS is even higher since HIV is 500 times smaller than a human sperm and 1/10th to 1/3rd the size of the smallest detectable hole in a condom. Moreover, while a woman can become pregnant only 100 hours each month, due to the nature of her ovulatory cycle, HIV can be transmitted at any time.

Whether among heterosexuals or homosexuals, AIDS is clearly linked to promiscuous and/or unnatural sexual activity, such as sodomy (anal intercourse), as well as intravenous drug use.