If it explains it, it explains about 5% of it. IV drug use explains another five, and taking it in the rear explains the other 90%.
Mostly humans get HIV from having homosexual sex.
A few inherit it at birth and others get it from bi-sexual males.Some from blood transfusions,but in the end if you stay away from having sex with homosexuals ,your chances of getting it are slim.
Now if I could get someone to come to Southern Maryland and tell me why so many of us down here are dying of Cancer, I would be interested.
That being said, if things were used for what they were designed for, the problem would decrease dramatically:
Another factor that may have been overlooked in this study is the unlikelyhood of our ancestors having their @sses pounded in gay bathouses. On an evolutionary note, the mythic gay gene is clearly a message from mother nature to discontinue this line of genetic experimentation.
Fruitism = bad; Genetic diversity = good.
Spread Of Endogenous Retrovirus K Is Similar In The DNA Of Humans And Rhesus MonkeysAccording to paleontologic and molecular studies, the chimpanzee (Pan troglodytes) is the closer relative to the humans (Homo sapiens) and that both lineages had a common ancestor at 5 to 7 million years ago.
adapted from Public Library Of Science materials
ScienceDaily
Friday, October 12, 2007
Moreover, the human-chimp lineage split from that of the rhesus monkey (Macaca mulatta) around 25 million years ago. However, by studying the population dynamics of complete copies of primate endogenous retrovirus family K (ERV-K) in the genomes of humans, chimpanzee and rhesus monkey, a surprising pattern was observed.
The study by Romano and colleagues being published this week on PLoS One revealed that human ERV-K had a similar demographic signature to that of the rhesus monkey, both differing greatly from that of the chimpanzee. The data suggested that the humans and rhesus have been purging ERV-K copies from their genomes while the chimpanzee ERV-K population kept the signature of increasing numbers of ERV-K amplification in the genome of ancestral primates during the last 20 million years.
Human Ancestors Went Out Of Africa And Then Came Back... [1998]
ScienceDaily | Friday, August 7, 1998 | adapted from New York University materials
Posted on 12/17/2007 8:37:11 PM EST by SunkenCiv
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-chat/1940963/posts