Posted on 08/21/2018 5:39:09 PM PDT by Ennis85
In a sweeping, one-hour meeting with The Salt Lake Tribune's editorial board on Monday, the Salt Lake County Republican Party's new communication director made claims about the LGBTQ community that the county health department described as "wildly inaccurate" and Equality Utah said are " deeply irresponsible. "
Dave Robinson joined county GOP Chairman Scott Miller, who has been on the job for a little more than a month, for a conversation about where they see the party headed on issues ranging from water to land use and the LGBTQ community.
Miller said he's looking to make his party "relevant again" during his roughly nine-month term, noting that it has been "apathetic" in the past. In the future, he said, the party needs to work to represent the entire county and not just the "far right."
"As far as changing the direction of the party, [it] is really just to re-engage with our communities as a whole," he said, indicating environmental communities and people of color.
Robinson, the party's communication director since late July, also noted that some people view the Republican Party as unfriendly toward the gay community.
"I said, you can own your own business, you can run for office - I do not think there's a better time on this planet in history to be gay than right now," Robinson said, citing his recent response to his neighbors when they expressed beliefs about an intolerant GOP.
But what about the high rate of suicide among the LGBTQ community? they countered.
"So then I walked through and I said, 'I actually think it has more to do with the lifestyle that the gays are leading that they refuse to have any scrutiny with,'" said Robinson, who is gay.
Robinson told The Tribune that while many people attribute the high suicide rate to the culture of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints or to Utah's high altitude, that may not capture the full story. He said he knows people in the community who have had "over 2,000 sex partners" and said he thinks that could be at the root of "some of the self-loathing to the point of suicide."
"You talk to some of these people that have had grundles of sex partners and the self-loathing and basically the unhappiness and the self-hatred level is tremendously high," he said, noting that they may turn to sex to fill a hole left by a lack of acceptance in Utah. "The gay community really needs to start having some conversations within their community, saying how our lifestyle affects our mental health."
Utah's youth powder rate has grown at an alarming pace , according to recent studies conducted by the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The state's suicide rate among young adults ages 10 to 17 had more than doubled from 2011 to 2015, growing at an annual clip nearly four times faster than the national average.
In all, 150 youths died by suicide over the five-year period, and it's thought that LGBTQ youth are at a higher risk.
Troy Williams, executive director of Equality Utah, pushes back on Robinson's comments about the suicide rates, saying his theory is based on "old, tired stereotypes and tropes" that members of the LGBTQ community are promiscuous. He also noted that the suicide problem is most prevalent among youth, many of whom have probably never had a sex partner.
"Condemning who and how we love is a strange way to build a bridge between the Republican Party and the LGBTQ community," Williams said. "Mr. Robinson's rhetorical is deeply irresponsible and unbecoming of a leader in a political party in the state of Utah. "
At the meeting with The Salt Lake Tribune, Miller said high sufficiency rates are an example of one of the "internal issues" in a community that the party wants to have dialogue with. But he told the newspaper later that he does not need to agree with Robinson's stance that a multitude of partners may contribute to high rates of suicide, noting that he does not have enough information on that particular issue.
As far as his stance on the LGBTQ community, Miller told The Tribune that although he would likely "catch some grief" from hard-right Republicans, he thinks that allowing members of the LGBTQ community to "live their life the way they deem fit" is a fundamental tenet of the Constitution.
Robinson also said in the meeting that he thinks issues around the PrEP pill, a daily preventive strategy for those at risk of contracting HIV, need more attention as a factor for the rise of STDs in the LGBTQ community and also to the rise of mental- health issues.
He said the gay community "went to the county health department and said, 'Look, if you love the gays, then you need to give us and all of our people this medicine for free.' And so the county's like, 'Yes, we love the gays,' so they start giving them all this medicine. "
Then, he said, members of the LGBTQ community began having unprotected sex like "bunny rabbits" at monthly "sex parties" because they were unaware that the pill did not prevent STDs.
Lynn Beltran, the STD and HIV epidemiology supervisor at the Salt Lake County Health Department, called Robinson's claims "wildly inaccurate."
Although she noted that Salt Lake County did work with a member of the LGBTQ community on PrEP outreach, she said it has never given out free pills - and that the county's STD clinic is not even able to prescribe the medication.
She agreed that there had been a national lack of education on PrEP that may lead more people to engage in unprotected sex.
Robinson said he relayed the information from the health department as he understood it and that there may have been some mischaracterization in his conversation with the county.
But Williams said Robinson's statements are a misguided way to reach the group the county Republican party is looking to engage with.
"He is mischaracterizing and spreading misinformation about our community," Williams said. "And if he truly wants to help the Republican party open up their doors to actually invite the LGBTQ community in, he needs to stop this salacious and egregious misinformation."
A large portion of the lesbian side matches them.
My Gf is a registered nurse here in Hollywood. Tells me that the entire AIDS/HIV section at 3 of the most well-known hospitals here are ALL full of faggots. Not kids, not straight people...ass munchers everyone of them.
Its a mental disorder... of course they have higher suicide rates.. doesn’t matter if they are in a society that is accepting or not... its a mental disorder, period.
they are perpetually unhappy people because they are messed up and know it, and no amount of external validation fixes that.
They chose lust instead of love. Lust is about the self and love is about the other. The ends of each path are so divergent yet they demand that the outcome be the same.
Mental illness contributes to too many partners and suicide and abuse and....
Yeah, one.
The mental health and emotional problems that these people have contribute to both the STD and suicide rate.
Correlation of STD and suicide is not causation. They don’t cause each other; a single issue (mental health) causes them both.
We are about as likely to find unicorn horns as we are to find logic coming from the advocates for the sexually confused.
No. Those in the LGBTQ community, such as it is, are by definition mentally unstable. Ergo...
Two dozen cited studies regarding homosexuality causing increased health risks including mental illness and increased suicides.
http://www.f2a.org/images/RISKS_TO_HOMOSEXUAL_BEHAVIOR_final.pdf
“who and how we love” There are a few definitions of “love” in the Bible. Rest assured the author is not using the correct definition here and is blithely ignorant of the correct one.
Promiscuity leads to death when the spread of bacteria (or viruses) gets out of hand. People should think twice about routinely sharing their bodys biomes. In the bathhouse days, men could share fluids with dozens a night. Reading about AIDS patient zero, he barely had time to serve the drinks on his flights. He did a lot of damage. He wasnt alone.
1. Bill Roundy, “STD Rates on the Rise,” New York Blade News, December 15, 2000, p.
1.
2. “Increases in Unsafe Sex and Rectal Gonorrhea among Men Who Have Sex with Men-
-San Francisco, California, 1994-1997,” Mortality and Morbidity Weekly Report (Centers
for Disease Control and Prevention), January 29, 1999, p. 45.
3. Ibid.
4. Ulysses Torassa, “Some With HIV Aren’t Disclosing Before Sex; UCSF Researcher’s
1,397-person Study Presented During aids Conference,” The San Francisco Examiner
(July 15, 2000).
5. Jon Garbo, “Gay and Bi Men Less Likely to Disclose They Have HIV,” GayHealth
News (July 18, 2000). Available at: www.gayhealth.com/templates/0/news?record=136.
6. Ibid.
7. Jon Garbo, “Risky Sex Common Among Gay Club and Bar Goers,” GayHealth News
(January 3, 2001). Available at: www.gayhealth.com/templates/97863827496203.../
index.html?record=35.
8. “Bisexuals Serve as ‘Bridge’ Infecting Women With HIV,” Reuters News Service (July
30, 2000). Available at: www.mb.com/ph/scty/2000%2D07/sc073004.asp.
9. A. P. Bell and M. S. Weinberg, Homosexualities: A Study of Diversity Among Men and
Women (New York: Simon and Schuster, 1978), pp. 308, 9; see alsoBell, Weinberg and
Hammersmith, Sexual Preference (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1981).
10. Paul Van de Ven et al., “A Comparative Demographic and Sexual Profile of Older
Homosexually Active Men,” Journal of Sex Research 34 (1997): 354. Dr. Paul Van de
Ven reiterated these results in a private conversation with Dr. Robert Gagnon on
September 7, 2000.
11. “Survey Finds 40 percent of Gay Men Have Had More Than 40 Sex Partners,”
Lambda Report, January/February 1998, p. 20.
12. M. Pollak, “Male Homosexuality,” in Western Sexuality: Practice and Precept in
Past and Present Times, edited by P. Aries and A. Bejin, pp. 40-61, cited by Joseph
Nicolosi in Reparative Therapy of Male Homosexuality (Northvale, New Jersey: Jason
Aronson Inc., 1991), pp. 124, 25.
13. David P. McWhirter and Andrew M. Mattison, The Male Couple: How Relationships
Develop (Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey: Prentice-Hall, 1984), pp. 252, 3.
14. M. Saghir and E. Robins, Male and Female Homosexuality (Baltimore: Williams and
Wilkins, 1973), p. 225; L.A. Peplau and H. Amaro, “Understanding Lesbian
Relationships,” in Homosexuality: Social, Psychological, and Biological Issues, edited
byJ. Weinrich and W. Paul (Beverly Hills: Sage, 1982).
15. A.P.M. Coxon et al., “Sex Role Separation in Diaries of Homosexual Men,” AIDS,
July 1993, pp. 877-882.
16. G. J. Hart et al., “Risk Behaviour, Anti-HIV and Anti-Hepatitis B Core Prevalence in
Clinic and Non-clinic Samples of Gay Men in England, 1991-1992,” AIDS, July 1993,
pp. 863-869, cited in “Homosexual Marriage: The Next Demand,” Position Analysis
paper by Colorado for Family Values, May 1994.
17. Bill Roundy, “STDs Up Among Gay Men: CDC Says Rise is Due to HIV
Misperceptions,” The Washington Blade (December 8, 2000). Available at:
www.washblade.com/health/a.
18. Richard A. Zmuda, “Rising Rates of Anal Cancer for Gay Men,” Cancer News
(August 17, 2000). Available at: cancerlinksusa.com/cancernews_sm/Aug2000
/081700analcancer.
19. “Studies Point to Increased Risks of Anal Cancer,” The Washington Blade (June 2,
2000). Available at: www.washblade.com/health/000602hm.
20. Mortality and Morbidity Weekly Report (Centers for Disease Control and Prevention)
September 4, 1998, p. 708.
21. “Viral Hepatitus B—Frequently Asked Questions,” National Center for Infectious
Diseases (Centers for Disease Control and Prevention)September 29, 2000. Available at:
www.cdc.gov/ncidod/diseases/hepatitis/b/faqb.
22. “Hepatitus C: Epidemiology: Transmission Modes” Mortality and Morbidity Weekly
Report (Centers for Disease Control and Prevention) 1998.Available at:
www.cdc.gov/ncidod/diseases/hepatitis /c/edu/1/default.htm.
23. “Gonorrhea,” Division of Sexually Transmitted Diseases (Centers For Disease Control
and Prevention) September, 2000. Available at: www.cdc.gov/nchstp/dstd/
24. “Increases in Unsafe Sex and Rectal Gonorrhea.”
25. Mortality and Morbidity Weekly Report (Centers for Disease Control and Prevention)
January 29, 1999, p. 48.
26. J. Vincelette et al., “Predicators of Chlamydial Infection and Gonorrhea among
Patients Seen by Private Practitioners,” Canadian Medical Association Journal 144
(1995): 713-721.
27. SPR Jebakumar et al., “Value of Screeningfor Oropharyngeal Chlamydia Trachomatis
Infection,” Journal of Clinical Pathology 48 (1995): 658-661.
28. “Some Facts about Syphilis,” Division of Sexually Transmitted Diseases (Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention)October 1999. Available at: www.cdc.gov/nchstp/dstd/
Fact_Sheets/Syphilis_Facts.
29. “Syphilis Elimination: History in the Making,” Division of Sexually Transmitted
Diseases (Centers for Disease Control and Prevention)October 1999. Available at:
www.cdc.gov/nchstp/dstd/Fact_Sheets/Syphilis_Facts.
30. C. M. Hutchinson et al., “Characteristics of Patients with Syphilis Attending
Baltimore STD Clinics,” Archives of Internal Medicine 151 (1991): 511-516.
31. “Syphilis Elimination.”
32. Homosexual advocates object to the use of this term (Gay Bowel Syndrome), which
they say unfairly stigmatizes homosexual behavior. Health Implications Associated with
Homosexuality (Austin: The Medical Institute for Sexual Health, 1999), p. 55.
33. “STD Treatment Guidelines: Proctitis, Proctocolitis, and Enteritis,” (Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention) 1993. Available at: /www.ama-assn.org/special/std
/treatmnt/guide/stdg3470.htm.
34. Jack Morin, Anal Pleasure and Health: A Guide for Men and Women (San Francisco:
Down There Press, 1998), p. 220.
35. Health Implications, p. 56.
36. “STD Treatment Guidelines.”
37. Health Implications; See Morin, Anal Pleasure and Health, p. 220, 1.
38. Health Implications.
39. “Table 9. Male Adult/Adolescent AIDS Cases by Exposure Category and
Race/Ethnicity, Reported through December 1999, United States,” Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention: Division of HIV/AIDS Prevention: available at:
www/cdc.gov/hiv/stats/hasr1102/table9.
40. “HIV/AIDS Among US Women: Minority and Young Women at Continuing
Risk,” Divisions of HIV/AIDS Prevention (Centers for Disease Control)November 14,
2000. Available at: www.cdc.gov/hiv/pubs/facts/women.
41. Ibid.
42. “Studies Point to Increased Risks of Anal Cancer.”
43. “Young People at Risk: HIV/AIDS among America’s Youth,” Divisions of HIV/AIDS
Prevention (Centers for Disease Control)November 14, 2000. Available at:
www.cdc.gov/hiv/pubs/facts/youth.htm.
44. Ibid.
45. Ibid.
46. “Need for Sustained HIV Prevention Among Men who Have Sex with Men,”
Divisions of HIV/AIDS Prevention (Centers for Disease Control)November 14, 2000.
Available at: www.cdc.gov/hiv/pubs/facts/msm.
47. “Resurgent Bacterial Sexually Transmitted Disease among Men Who Have Sex with
Men—King County, Washington, 1997-1999,” Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report:
Centers for Disease Control, September 10, 1999, pp. 773-777. Available at:
www.cdc.gov/epo/mmwr/preview/mmwrhtml/ mm4835a1.
48. “Need for Sustained HIV Prevention.”
49. Bob Roehr, “Anal Cancer and You,” Between the Lines News (November 16, 2000).
Available at: www.pridesource.com/cgi-bin/article?article=3835560.
50. “Studies Point to Increased Risks of Anal Cancer.”
51. Rhonda Smith, “HPV Can be Transmitted between Women,” The Washington Blade
(December 4, 1998). Available at: www.washblade.com/health/9901011h.
52. Ibid.
53. Katherine Fethers et al., “Sexually Transmitted Infections and Risk Behaviors in
Women Who Have Sex with Women,” Sexually Transmitted Infections 76 (2000):348.
55. V. Gonzales, et al., “Sexual and Drug-Use Risk Factors for hiv and STDs: A
Comparison of Women with and without Bisexual Experiences,” American Journal of
Public Health 89 (December 1999): 1846.
56. Ibid.
57. “Bisexuals Serve as ‘Bridge’ Infecting Women with HIV,” Reuters News Service (July
30, 2000).
58. Ibid.
59. “Sexually Transmitted Infections,” p. 347.
60. Ibid.
61. Rhonda Smith, “Childbirth Linked with Smaller Breast Tumor Size,” The Washington
Blade (December 17, 1999). Available at: www.washblade.com/health/000114lh.
62. “HPV can be Transmitted between Women.”
63. Katherine Fethers et al., “Sexually Transmitted Infections and Risk Behaviors in
Women Who Have Sex with Women,” Sexually Transmitted Infections, July 2000, p.
345.
64. Joanne Hall, “Lesbians Recovering from Alcoholic Problems: An Ethnographic Study
of Health Care Expectations,” Nursing Research 43 (1994): 238-244.
65. Peter Freiberg, “Study: Alcohol Use More Prevelent for Lesbians,” The Washington
Blade, January 12, 2001, p. 21.
66. Ibid.
67. Karen Paige Erickson, Karen F. Trocki, “Sex, Alcohol and Sexually Transmitted
Diseases: A National Survey,” Family Planning Perspectives 26 (December 1994): 261.
68. Ibid.
69. Lettie L. Lockhart et al., “Letting out the Secret: Violence in Lesbian Relationships,”
Journal of Interpersonal Violence 9 (December 1994): 469-492.
70. Gwat Yong Lie and Sabrina Gentlewarrier, “Intimate Violence in Lesbian
Relationships: Discussion of Survey Findings and Practice Implications,” Journal of
Social Service Research 15 (1991): 41-59.
71. D. Island and P. Letellier, Men Who Beat the Men Who Love Them: Battered Gay
Men and Domestic Violence (New York: Haworth Press, 1991), p. 14.
72. “Violence Between Intimates,” Bureau of Justice Statistics Selected Findings,
November 1994, p. 2.
73. Health Implications, p. 79.
74. J. Bradford, et al., “National Lesbian Health Care Survey: Implications for Mental
Health Care,” Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology 62 (1994): 239, cited in
Health Implications Associated with Homosexuality, p. 81.
75. R. Herrell, et al., “A Co-Twin Study in Adult Men,” Archives of General Psychiatry
56 (1999): 867-874.
76. D. Fergusson, et al., “Is Sexual Orientation Related to Mental Health Problems and
Suicidality in Young People?” Archives of General Psychiatry 56 (October 1999), p. 876-
884.
77. Ibid.
78. Robert S. Hogg et al., “Modeling the Impact of HIV Disease on Mortality in Gay and
Bisexual Men,” International Journal of Epidemiology 26 (1997): 657.
79. Quoted in Gabriel Rotello, Sexual Ecology: AIDS and the Destiny of Gay Men (New
York: Penguin Books, 1997), p. 286.
Thats more like it vs blanket statements.
Good job
were you not banned for you candor
Pretty interested in this stuff I d say.
One ref was fine for me but thanks
“Do too many sex partners contribute to high suicide rates in the LGBTQ community?”
We hope so.
Study Suggests That Women Absorb DNA From Every Man They’ve Ever Slept With
https://www.yourtango.com/2017304209/new-study-suggests-women-absorb-dna-every-man-theyve-ever-had-sex
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