Monday, January 30, 2012

Wanted: Stacey Campfield, Dead or Alive

By now I'm sure everyone in the world has heard of the bill trying to pass in Tennessee that is commonly referred to as the "Don't Say Gay" bill. For those of you who have missed it, the whole premiss of the law is that teachers and other people within a school system are not allowed to discuss homosexuality at all. They can speak about heterosexual reproduction and that is all... now, that doesn't sound awful but then you must take into consideration the gay students, the children of gays parents, etc that are being not only left out but segregated because you're not ALLOWED to talk about that with students.

So here's the thing... it's no secret that I'm a flaming liberal who has always had a passion for equal rights with emphasis on LGBT. So I HATE this man. I hate the fact that he perpetuates a closed minded, backwoods stereotype of Tennessee to not only the nation but the world. I hate that he is spouting misinformation about gays and HIV/AIDS.

I am absolutely shaking with anger after having just listened to a radio interview with him.
He makes me want to hit people, mostly him...





Now, so the rest of you can be just as pissed as I am and inform yourselves as to why this man should NEVER get elected again, here's an article from the Knoxville New Sentinel as of today:


NASHVILLE — State Sen. Stacey Campfield says he was speaking "on the fly" about the origins of AIDS and its transmission during a radio interview that now has "some people going crazy."
Still, the Knoxville Republican said his assertions, including the possibility that AIDS originated from a man having sexual intercourse with a monkey, reasonably reflect what others have said in researching and writing on the subject.
"I'm not a historian on AIDS," he said in an interview Friday. "But I've read and seen what other people have read and seen, and those facts are out there."
Dr. Jacques Pepin, author of the book "The Origin of AIDS," said some of the assertions are "kind of funny," in the sense of being strange and not fully factual.
Campfield was interviewed by Michelangelo Signorile, editor-at-large of Huffington Gay Voices, on Signorile's radio show on SiriusXM's LGBT channel, OutQ. The subject was a Campfield-sponsored bill, nicknamed the "Don't Say Gay" bill (SB49), which Campfield said is intended to block discussion of homosexuality in grades kindergarten through eight in Tennessee schools.
In a Huffington Post story on the interview, Signorile describes Campfield, speaking in an "often belligerent and sarcastic tone," as "comparing homosexuality to bestiality and making what public health officials would characterize as recklessly false assertions about AIDS." Campfield said Friday that part of his comments were taken "out of context" in the story.
On the origin of AIDS, Campfield told Signorile at one point, "It was one guy screwing a monkey, if I recall correctly, and then having sex with men It was an airline pilot, I believe, if I recall correctly."
After Signorile challenged that statement, Campfield added:
"My understanding and correct me if I'm wrong, Mr. Science, on this, but my understanding also is that it is virtually — not completely impossible — it's virtually impossible to contract AIDS outside of blood transfusions through heterosexual sex. It's virtually impossible. If you are having anal sex, yes, you are much more likely to contract AIDS."
Campfield, who characterized Signorile as "clearly getting upset" as the conversation developed, said the monkey sex theory is included in the 1980s book "And the Band Played On," by Randy Shilts.
"That's one of the theories in the book," Campfield said, adding that, insofar as his language goes, "There is not a polite way to say it, so that's what I said."
The senator said the book also identifies an Air Canada flight attendant, Gaƫtan Dugas, who died in 1984, as "patient zero" in the transmission of AIDS through sexual relations with many men. Campfield said the "patient zero" theory was also the subject of an American Journal of Medicine article at one point.
Pepin said that it is generally accepted that the initial transmission of AIDS from chimpanzees to humans occurred in Central Africa, probably in 1921, when a hunter who killed a chimp contracted the virus while butchering the animal for food.
The theory of a "patient zero" being responsible for much of AIDS transition is advanced by "And the Band Played On," Pepin said, but is now generally discredited.
"It's, of course, in retrospect a bit ridiculous," said Pepin. "As I explained, the virus had been spreading in Africa and elsewhere for probably 50 or 60 years before this man got infected."
In the radio interview, Signorile told Campfield that HIV, the virus that causes AIDS "is transmitted through vaginal heterosexual sex," and Campfield replies, "Very rarely."
"My understanding is that it is virtually — not completely, but virtually — impossible to contract AIDS through heterosexual sex," Campfield said on the radio show.
Pepin said that, on average, heterosexual intercourse between an infected person and a noninfected person results in transmission of the disease about "one in a thousand times." But he noted that 100 instances of intercourse would raise the probability to 10 percent and that, in parts of Africa, about 30 percent of the population is infected, mostly through heterosexual intercourse.
Campfield said Friday that his point on the radio show was valid in that, within the United States, heterosexual encounters almost never result in AIDS "unless you're having sex with someone from Africa or an IV drug user."
"The odds of men catching it from women are very, very, very low," he said.
The "Don't Say Gay" bill, which Campfield prefers to call "don't teach gay," passed the state Senate last year after being revised to declare that only sexuality involving "natural human reproduction" can be addressed in classrooms. It still awaits a House vote.
The senator said it is needed in part because homosexuality is more dangerous than heterosexuality and "there are people who want to glorify risky behavior in schools."
Zack McMillin of the Commercial Appeal contributed to this story.










Side Note: I am thoroughly proud that I was able to write this rant without using only the 4 letters words that run through my head everytime I think of this douchecanoe!


1 comment:

  1. No joke and amen sista! Fighting men like this is the reason I got into my career in the first place.

    ReplyDelete