From the archives of The Memory Hole

HIV=AIDS Controversy: Investigative Reporting

The following interview was published in the April 1997 issue of Zenger's, the publication of H.E.A.L. San Diego. It took place while John Lauritsen was on a book tour in California. Zenger's is a monthly publication. Issues can be ordered by writing to:
Zenger's, 1043 University Avenue, #102, San Diego, CA, 92103.


John Lauritsen:
Legendary AIDS Journalist
Speaks to H.E.A.L.-S.D. March 18

by Mark Gabrish Conlan


Aside from UC Berkeley microbiology professor Peter Duesberg, Ph.D., it's hard to think of anyone who has done more to expose the conventional wisdom about AIDS for the absurd mythology it is than John Lauritsen. A Harvard-trained survey researcher, social scientist and Queer community activist since 1969, Lauritsen may not have had any training in the biological sciences, but he did have the expertise to notice how, even in the early 1980s, officials at the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) and the National Institutes of Health (NIH) were already "cooking" the AIDS statistics to conceal the role of recreational drugs in causing the syndrome and create a false credibility for their insistence that AIDS was caused by a single infectious agent.
Though Lauritsen's first AIDS article was published in 1985 in the Philadelphia Gay News, it was the now-defunct New York Native which gave his work--and his name--national and international exposure. In a decade's worth of insightful and luminous journalism for the Native, he exposed the scientific incompetence and fraud in the original 1986 clinical trial that led to the licensing of AZT as the first "anti-HIV treatment," and demonstrated that no reliable evidence existed to support the belief that the so-called "Human Immunodeficiency Virus," or HIV, caused AIDS or any other human disease. Lauritsen also attended scientific conferences and, in the best tradition of activist journalism, continually attacked the misleading and false arguments cited in the public to bolster the HIV/AIDS model.
Lauritsen has published five books: The Early Homosexual Rights Movement, 1864-1935 (which he co-authored in the 1970s and which established him as one of the pioneer Queer historians); Death Rush: Poppers and AIDS (co-authored with San Francisco AIDS activist Hank Wilson in 1986, the first book to link any part of the AIDS syndrome to abuse of a specific substance); two collections of his New York Native AIDS articles, Poison by Prescription: The AZT Story in 1990 and The AIDS War in 1993 (both absolutely indispensable for anyone seeking to understand what AIDS really is); and his latest, The AIDS Cult. A collection of essays by various authors, co-edited by Lauritsen and Toronto AIDS activist Ian Young, The AIDS Cult focuses on the psychological factors driving the syndrome and the ways in which the expectations of AIDS health care providers, service organizations and both the mainstream and Queer media are actually helping kill people who have been diagnosed with AIDS or HIV.
A longtime resident of New York City, Lauritsen moved to Provincetown, Massachusetts in 1995 and has continued to write articles about AIDS and disseminate them through the Internet. Lauritsen will be in California in March 1997 for a three-city tour to promote The AIDS Cult. (...)


Zenger's: How did you first get interested in looking at alternative perspectives on AIDS?

Lauritsen: I started becoming interested in AIDS in 1983. It was clear even then that the Public Health Service was on the wrong track, and it certainly appeared to me that AIDS was not an infectious disease. I thought it was very likely that the illnesses called "AIDS" must have something to do with the behavior or the circumstances of those Gay men who were getting sick. So I read everything there was on the topic of AIDS--which you could do then. There were only about 18 to 24 medical articles at that particular time. That's changed, because apparently now there are over 100,000 articles on AIDS, and no one could possibly read more than a tiny fraction of that.
But I came across an article by Arthur Evans from many years ago, on the topic of poppers, and it mentioned Hank Wilson in San Francisco. It struck me as very likely that there could be a connection there, so I contacted Hank and we started collaborating. Towards the end of 1983, we published our first pamphlet on poppers and AIDS. It was mostly a bibliography, but we did make the point that you could make a reasonable case that poppers had something to do with AIDS, particularly with Kaposi's sarcoma.
We were viciously attacked. Hank Wilson was called a "Gay traitor" in the Gay press for criticizing this dangerous chemical. In 1986 we published a small book called Death Rush: Poppers and AIDS, which I think was one of the very first works to use Koch's postulates to argue against the "AIDS virus" theory. [Koch's postulates are the standard rules in microbiology used to determine whether a particular microbe causes a particular disease. The postulates are: 1) The microorganism must be found in all cases of the disease. 2) It must be isolated from the host and grown in pure culture. 3) It must reproduce the original disease when introduced into a susceptible host. 4) It must be found in the experimental host so infected, and the growth of symptoms in the newly infected host must correlate to growth in the numbers of the microbe present in the system. HIV does not meet Koch's postulates as the cause of AIDS because at least 4,621 documented cases exist of AIDS with no trace of HIV exposure.]
My first major article criticizing the "AIDS virus" hypothesis was in early 1985 ["CDC's Tables Obscure AIDS-Drugs Connection," Philadelphia Gay News, February 14, 1985, reprinted as the first chapter in The AIDS War]. It made quite an impression and was reprinted in about five other papers. One thing led to another and I started writing for the New York Native. My first article for them was in 1985, and the last one was in December 1996 ["Tragedy by the Sea: Provincetown Is Becoming Protease Town," Native, December 9, 1996].
Zenger's: You said that even from the beginning you were suspicious of the idea that AIDS could be caused by a single infectious agent. Why?
Lauritsen: It wasn't spreading beyond Gay men very much. Also, there was no reason to believe that it was an infectious agent. There was also some doubt in my mind as to whether the illnesses being described really could be considered a coherent disease. I was influenced by the ideas and writings of Dr. Joseph Sonnabend in New York City. I've known him for many years, and he was one of the very first AIDS critics. A couple of his early articles in the New York Native addressed head-on the issue of whether there is really such a thing as "AIDS." Back then the surveillance definitions were sort of a process of elimination. They had this concept of "immune deficiency," and the idea was that if you eliminated all known causes of immune deficiency, that anything left over had to be "AIDS."
Even in the early days there was something very peculiar about the definition of AIDS, or what I would later call the "AIDS construct." The two original hallmark diseases--one being Kaposi's sarcoma, the other being Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia--really had nothing in common. Even if you accepted the notion of immune deficiency, which they defined in a way in which it had never been defined before, using newly developed techniques to count T4 cells, Kaposi's sarcoma could not rationally be linked to the idea of immunodeficiency. People can have Kaposi's sarcoma and yet have perfectly normal T-cell ratios and immune systems. So the notion that some as-yet-undiscovered microbe had caused an underlying condition of immune deficiency, which in turn caused all of these other illnesses, never did hold water--not even in the beginning.
Zenger's: You were instrumental in writing the first set of safer-sex guidelines in 1983 and I recall reading that you and the late Michael Callen essentially became leaders of competing camps as to recommendations for how Gay men could reduce their risk of AIDS by changing their sexual practices. Could you tell me a little more about his?
Lauritsen: Actually, Michael Callen and I were basically on the same side in the debates that took place in the committee. Both of us did not accept the idea that AIDS was caused by a new infectious agent, and both of us insisted that it was necessary to recommend against drug abuse as well as recommending practices which would reduce the likelihood of acquiring either known or unknown venereal diseases.
Zenger's: How did these guidelines compare to what we know today?
Lauritsen: Well, they did recommend using condoms, and avoiding activities which exchange body fluids. But they differed from the guidelines today in that they also said don't use poppers, and they cautioned against excessive use of alcohol and drugs. I believe they also mentioned nutrition, and in general just taking care of yourself. That changed very much because Gay Men's Health Crisis, which funded the committee, in an act of betrayal issued their own guidelines, which they had been secretly preparing. Their own guidelines had no mention whatever of curtailing drug or alcohol use, or anything at all in terms of nutrition or general health. Their own guidelines were exclusively concerned with what we now think of as "safer sex."
Zenger's: I noticed the book The AIDS Cult began with a very long paper from 1984 by Casper Schmitz that takes up about one-third of the total length of the book, and focuses on the theory that AIDS is exclusively a psycho-social construct. How much of that material do you think is still relevant, and how much of it needs to be modified?
Lauritsen: It's a good question. Every time I read it I have a somewhat different take on it. I think it's a brilliant essay, and I think it was the first major challenge to the "AIDS virus" etiology. I don't accept that AIDS is solely caused by psychological factors. On the other hand, I don't think that we can understand AIDS especially as affecting Gay men, without taking into account the cultural context, which he supplies quite brilliantly: the warfare which was waged against Gay men by the Moral Majority, or the much older Judeo-Christian tradition of the death penalty for men who have sex together.
Some of his insights, I think, are still absolutely relevant. The idea that we are in a "group trance" is something that I have observed many times in the last decade. The concept that you have on the one side sadistic persecutors, which would be the Moral Majority; and on the other side the willing, sacrificial victims, which would be Gay men and also drug abusers.
I also believe there is a type of death wish among some Gay men who have acquired AIDS or HIV diagnoses. Simply rational arguments don't avail with them. They are determined, for whatever reason, to go through with the sacrificial ritual. I also agree with some of the insights--for example, the idea that in some of the South American religious cults, they had to display the skulls of the people who were sacrificed so the gods could see them and indicate at some point that there had been enough people sacrificed. I think that fits in very well with the idea of the AIDS quilt, where all these panels of tens of thousands of people who have died of AIDS are spread out, and people visit the site and walk around it in a very religious way. However, my own viewpoint has a different emphasis, which is why my own essay follows right after Casper's, and goes into the toxicological aspects.
Zenger's: One thing I noted, particularly about Casper Schmitz's essay, was that he said that the Gay community's response to the attack of the Moral Majority and the radical Right in general essentially played into the role of sacrificial victim. He was especially critical of our adopting the pink triangle as a symbol of Gay liberation, and taking a very meek, pleading tone in some of the ads that were put out in response to the radical Right's attacks. As someone who has been involved in Gay liberation from the beginning, do you agree with that analysis; and if so, how should the community have responded to AIDS?
Lauritsen: I agree with Casper's analysis there. We have to bear in mind that groups such as the National Gay Task Force and the Metropolitan Community Church are not necessarily the "Gay movement." They're very top-down organizations, and who knows where these so-called "Gay leaders" come from? They just come out of nowhere. It's not as though it were a grass-roots thing.
How should we have responded with an uncompromising demand to know what the facts were--to know the truth. In fact, this has not been the case, and it fits in very much with Casper Schmitz's emphasis on the extremely irrational aspects of the AIDS phenomenon.
The Gay press, Gay people at all levels, don't want to know the truth. There has been more censorship in the Gay press, if anything, than in the straight media. I myself have witnessed on many , many occasions, where Gay men became hysterical whenever any attempt was made even to discuss AIDS beyond the usual mythologies. There may be reasons for it. There probably are intense guilt feelings over some of the causes of the illnesses that were called "AIDS," including the type of drug abuse that took place in some of the Gay scenes in the 1970s and early 1980s; as well as types of sex which were not very sensible or healthy.
The "AIDS virus" myth is very welcome to some of them because it completely absolves Gay men of any responsibility for AIDS. It allows them to see themselves as just innocent victims. Just out of the sky, or out of nowhere, there comes this evil virus and it does it all by itself. It has nothing to do with snorting poppers, nothing to do with popping pills or smoking or injecting drugs of different types. All of that's irrelevant. The virus does everything.
Zenger's: I think that's what conditioned the response to Peter Duesberg, Ph.D. when he first went public in 1990. He found himself subjected to this incredible critical assault from the Gay community. He was called a homophobe and told that the mere fact that he was suggesting that AIDS might have something to do with the behavior and lifestyle choices of certain Gay men was politically incorrect, bigoted and generally horrible.
Lauritsen: And both Duesberg and I have been called homophobic simply for criticizing poppers--not even for saying they might cause AIDS, but just saying that they're powerful mutagens, powerful oxidizing agents; that they damage human cells, and that it's a bad idea to use them. Now why it should be homophobic to point out the toxicities of a chemical is beyond me.
Zenger's: My immediate thought at that point is that certain people's lives and identities are so embodied in the chemicals they choose to use, that when you attack the chemicals you're attacking their identity.
Lauritsen: Of course, there's also the whole phenomenon of addiction. Whether the addiction is only psychological or whether a very real physical addiction--such as heroin, alcohol or cigarettes--people can become highly irrational in defending their addictions. They're hooked, and they don't want to give up their substances.
Zenger's: In fact, the AIDS establishment in general seems far less judgmental of people's drug use habits than it is of their sexual behavior. Very often, particularly when people still in their 20s, become "HIV-positive," they're given horrendous amounts of guilt in the community. Fingers are pointed at them saying, basically, "Well, we were ignorant. But you knew the rules. You knew what kinds of sex were 'safe.' You knew what kinds of sex weren't. And you turned 'positive,' so obviously you had the wrong kind of sex."
Lauritsen: Here you get into the heart of it, the really sticky question: whether or not people should even bother with "safe sex"? I would say that sex is something about which people should use judgment and common sense. They shouldn't just get intoxicated and screw around in back alleys with people they don't know. They should not live in a way that means they get gonorrhea all the time, which a lot of the guys were doing in the 1970s. But I frankly don't see any rational need for this whole elaborate set of strictures that are represented by "safe sex."
There is a need for Gay men to live in a healthful way, which would include everything from not using drugs to getting enough rest and exercise, and taking care of themselves psychologically. I think that's far more important than practicing "safe sex."
Zenger's: Why do you think so many Gay men respond to any questioning of the HIV/AIDS model with this kind of vicious hysteria?
Lauritsen: I'm not sure, but not only is there an incredibly intense fear, there's also a multi-billion dollar AIDS industry that's employing the practices that businesses use generally: psychological warfare, espionage, sabotage and all kinds of things. I mean, that's business as usual. So there have been slander campaigns conducted against Duesberg and me, and other AIDS dissidents, some of them quite grotesque, claiming that we have all sorts of weird beliefs or other things. Some of them are quite ad hominem. But this is a part of the picture. There's nothing in the Gay press to challenge the orthodox view of AIDS. The propaganda of the pharmaceutical companies now regularly appears in all of the Gay papers, and it has an effect. It molds people's beliefs about this thing.
Zenger's: In fact, the AIDS model that has been created by this giant propaganda machine seems to have a life of its own. There've been so many times when I've thought, "Oh, no. They can't get out of this one. They can't get out from under the documentation that there are AIDS cases without HIV. They can't get out from under the documentation the Concorde researchers came up with, that there was absolutely no correlation between CD4 T-cell counts and clinical health. They can't get out from under the failure of AZT as a front-line treatment." And yet they've been able to get out from under all of those, and maintain the myths.
They may twist logic, reality, common sense and the previously known facts of microbiology and biomedicine in general totally out of shape, but they do have an explanation for everything. And because they have been so successful at dominating the media, their explanations are accepted without question. So, given that "HIV, the virus that causes AIDS" has become that much a part of people's basic cultural knowledge, regardless of the utter lack of rational evidence that that is so, how do you attack it, and where?

Lauritsen: One thing that mainstream Americans can respond to is the extreme cost of the HIV/AIDS hypothesis. There's been $40 billion of taxpayers' money which has gone down the drain on this crazy hypothesis. In addition to that, there's been a wild range of estimates of the annual cost of treating one person with AIDS with the new drug "cocktails." I've never heard less than $10,000 a year, and some of them go to $40,000, $50,000 or $60,000.
The people with AIDS do not pay for this. There may be one or two who are sufficiently wealthy that they could. But basically, we pay for it, the taxpayers, either through our tax money or indirectly through higher premiums in our medical insurance. There's no such thing as a free lunch. And it's not fair that taxpayers should have to pay these sums for "treatments" which in fact are harmful no help at all.
In addition, there's the question of the disability benefits. At least some people with diagnoses of being "HIV-positive" or "AIDS" are perfectly capable of working, and yet they call themselves "retired" and they get far better benefits than ordinary people on welfare. It's not fair that hard-working citizens should pay taxes to support people who simply have a diagnosis that actually doesn't mean a damned thing. I'm not saying that people shouldn't get help when they really are sick. But I am saying that this whole structure of AIDS organizations, counselors, and so-called "service providers," as well as the people with the diagnoses, is harmful. It's harmful to the people with the diagnoses, and it's harmful to society at large.
Zenger's: That touches on one of the things that has always bothered me most about this. I had a 2 1/2-year relationship with a man who was quite sick with chronic fatigue syndrome and a rare ear disorder called hyperacusis. I really began to get quite upset at a personal level that here was someone who was incredibly sick, who was being consistently rejected for Social Security disability, while people who were quite healthy not only had disability payments, they had a whole infrastructure of help available to them because they happened to test "HIV-positive." I would say that the real forgotten victims of this are people in the Gay community who are genuinely sick, but with illnesses that don't fit the "HIV/AIDS" paradigm.
Lauritsen: There's a whole industry of providing services for people with AIDS. They now get free massages, free maid service, and all kinds of things. There has to be a certain resentment at some point among people who are having to pay for all this. Once again, there's no such thing as a free lunch. These things don't grow on trees.
Zenger's: Yet it seems to me that one of the major successes of the AIDS establishment, politically, has been to cast anybody who expresses that kind of resentment as a villain, as someone who is uncaring and uncompassionate and doesn't realize the genuine tragedy of AIDS. I noticed that Pete Wilson, the Governor of California, who is far from a liberal put in his latest state budget a major increase in funding for the AIDS Drug Assistance Program.
Now, Pete Wilson is not someone whose natural constituency is the Gay or AIDS community. But he's felt compelled as a politician to respond to this and direct a lot of state resources to buying these drugs for people with AIDS--which, if we're right, will not only kill them faster but will also mean that other people that the state could help, who are genuinely sick and might actually benefit from some of this money, will not be helped.

Lauritsen: Yes, and there's another example. Politicians or other people who oppose clean needle exchange programs are branded as bigoted and ignorant, whereas in fact in many cases they're better informed than the people who are advocating this needle-exchange nonsense. In the Black community, many leaders oppose these needle-exchange programs, and for very good reason: because they have seen how the Black communities are devastated by the drug epidemic. And yet they have been sharply criticized for doing so.
In New York City--and I'm sure this is true in most communities--ACT UP members go throughout the Lower East Side and other places, giving clean needles to drug addicts. The message is very clear; it's encouraging them to keep on shooting up. It tells these drug addicts that the drugs themselves are harmless; that it's only the needles that might be dangerous.
After many years of living in New York City, I have seen with my own eyes what drugs do to people. I've seen them kill people. I've seen people waste away quickly. And there are people--some of them Libertarians, some of them in the AIDS establishment --who actually claim that drugs, if they're not "cut" with harmful contaminants, are perfectly safe. They have the idea that there exist middle-class people who have used heroin for years and years and are in wonderful health. Well, that's absolute nonsense. There may be a few people who can use a small amount of some substance for a number of years, and get away with it. But all of these things have very serious long-term toxicities.
Zenger's: One of the essays in the book The AIDS Cult that most fascinated me was the concluding one by Ian Young, focused on young Gay men and how the HIV death cult has manifested there. By sheer coincidence, right after I read the book the Gay & Lesbian Times published a four-page article by its editor, Corri Planck, called "Twentysomething HIV-Positives," which pretty much confirmed everything that Ian had written in his essay. In particular, it made the same point [Berkeley psychologist] Walt Odets has made in his work: that the "safer sex" guidelines have become so restrictive and so arbitrary, that people are looking over them, throwing up their hands and saying, "Well, if that's all it takes to get HIV, it's not a question of if, but when."
Lauritsen: I think Ian's essay is really brilliant, and I've observed what he's talking about, particularly when he writes about how so many Gay men actually feel validated by being told they're "HIV-positive." There are a lot of Gay men who are in a state of shame and guilt, who are frightened. Some of them have had rather boring and meaningless lives, low self-esteem. And then all of a sudden the AIDS cult is presented to them, and they realize their can all of sudden be meaningful; that they can acquire status and "be somebody" by falling into this role of the sacrificial victim.
In his book The Golden Bough, Sir James Frazier draws a picture of how in primitive societies a great fuss was made over the sacrificial victim. They were treated with all kinds of benefits and privileges, up to the time when they were actually sacrificed. I think there is a parallel to the incredibly "privileged" way people who have AIDS, or have just tested "HIV-positive," are treated by the Gay community.
Zenger's: One other factor that might make Gay men unconsciously want to be "HIV-positive" is the obsession with youth in the Gay community, the extent to which people in our community are ostracized once they're no longer young and sexy. Do you think that there may be Gay men who are in a sense willing themselves to be "HIV-positive," to get sick with AIDS diseases and to die young, simply because they don't want to face the social ostracism that they fear will come with age?
Lauritsen: It's a terrible thing to say, but I think that is true in some cases, and it's not only sex appeal. There's a certain type of Gay man who doesn't ever want to grow up. They want to be little boys always. There are different phases of life that we go through, and at a certain point in life you're supposed to make the transition from one to another. But I think a lot of Gay men don't want to make those transitions, so they seize on AIDS as a way out of having to.
Zenger's: Another thing that occurred to me reading Ian Young's essay is that the very language that is used to communicate the test results--the terms "positive" and "negative"--itself seems to imply a desirability to the "positive" state. They don't have to use that language. The terms that actually appear on the test strips are "reactive" and "nonreactive." But for some reason, instead of using those terms, they embrace this concept of "positive" and "negative," which seems to carry with it an undercurrent of meaning that "positive" is the desirable thing to be.
Lauritsen: At least for Gay men, and of course the campaign to get tested has been waged almost entirely either for or against Gay men. I don't believe there's been any concerted attempt to get nondrug using straight people to get tested. Correct me if I'm wrong. I can't really think that anything really has been sustained along those lines.
Zenger's: Actually, under the provisions of the CARE Act renewal, there will be major campaigns on pregnant women. And it's occurred to me that whenever the AIDS establishment feels it's running out of suitable victims, the way to generate more victims would be to expand the "get tested" campaign and get more people tested. A certain amount of people who take the test will test "positive" for whatever biological reasons there are, and if they accept the overall paradigm that testing "HIV-positive" means they have the "deadly AIDS virus" and they need to go on "treatment" immediately, that would seem--if you and I are right on this subject--to be the way that the AIDS establishment can keep itself going by generating additional victims.
Lauritsen: But I don't think that it will, because it doesn't fit in with the group fantasy. Straight people aren't all that vulnerable because they haven't had to deal with the theological condemnation of Gay sex. So I think that something like that might start off for a little bit, but would end up fizzling rather quickly. I don't think the pregnant women thing will get very far, either.
Another point made very strongly in several essays in The AIDS Cults--the ones by Michael Ellner and Andrew Cort, Cass Mann and George Hazelhurst--is that the mortality of the people who have achieved a diagnosis has a lot to do with the message that is given to them. They're taught to believe that they should get sick and die, and that in this case a belief in doom, a belief in death, becomes the cause of death. Cass Mann especially went into the really harmful aspects of AIDS counseling, which I see right here in Provincetown. The message is given that if someone is "HIV-positive" or has an AIDS diagnosis, that they should already prepare for death; that they should come to some "spiritual understanding" that would allow them to die in a "spiritually correct" way.
There's nowhere any suggestion that people with a diagnosis should return to health--should simply get better and go on with life as somebody who once had a diagnosis. That's never recognized as a possibility. It also fits in with what I would call the "Christian mindset." Christianity is a religion which glorifies death, and which has great antipathy to the intellect and to the body. Both body and mind are downplayed in favor of something called "spirituality," and if you had to define the "spiritual" state, I guess you would say that death comes pretty close to it.
The emphasis of the essays in The AIDS Cult is on the psychological and cultural issues, and part of it is something as basic as the desire to live. This vicious campaign that the religious Right waged against Gay men helped destroy the will of many Gay men to live at all. they were told that they should die; and in fact, Judeo-Christian culture has been telling Gay men for at least 16 centuries that they ought to die. It does take its toll. And there's no pharmaceutical "quick fix" to give somebody a desire to live.
Zenger's: One passage in your own essay in The AIDS Cult that particularly struck me was this one:

Over the centuries, Gay men have been outcasts in societies governed by Judeo-Christian morality. The companionship of their own kind made it easier to bear this onus. Against a hostile world, they found solace in each other' arms. AIDS propaganda changed this. It killed love. The deepest relationship in life became fraught with fear and suspicion, and the fellowship of Gay men increasingly became one of mutual support for victimhood.

Lauritsen: Yes. Everything from "safe sex"--you know, the idea that you should "negotiate" a sexual encounter as though it were a business transaction of some sort--and with all of the literal prophylaxis, as well as emotional prophylaxis, involved in it, it's hard to see how there could really be any passion there. I suppose one should distinguish love from eroticism, but the spontaneous experience of either one is really killed off by the AIDS propaganda.
And as far as the victimhood thing goes, the effect of AIDS has not been good in the Gay community. There are some Gay men that have just pretty much ignored the whole AIDS thing, which I think is a healthy attitude. I mean, nobody is untouched by it, but these men have gone about their social lives and the rest of it, trying to pretend as much as possible that it's not there. But then there's the other extreme, also: the people in support groups who do nothing but live AIDS, all day long.
Zenger's: In fact, one thing that struck me when I read that paragraph was that this is really not confined to the Gay community. A straight woman named Meghan Daum, who was born in 1970, and therefore has lived her whole sexual life in the AIDS era, wrote a really extraordinary article in the New York Times Magazine on January 21, 1996, on how the mantras of "safer sex" have affected her life. She said:
One of the main tenets of the safe-sex message is that ageless mantra, "You don't know where he's been," meaning that everyone is a potential threat, that we're all either scoundrels or ignoramuses. ... The message we receive is that trusting anyone is itself an irresponsible act, that having faith in an intimate partner, particularly women in relation to men, is a symptom of such profound naïveté that we're obviously not mature enough to be having sex anyway. ...

We know that an "unsafe" man generally means someone who has shot drugs or slept with other men, or possibly slept with prostitutes. We find ourselves wondering about these things over dinner dates. We look for any hints of homosexual tendencies, any references to a hypodermic moment. We try to catch him in the lie we've been told he'll tell. What could be sadder? We're not allowed to believe anyone anymore. And the reason we're not isn't so much because of AIDS but because of the anxiety that ripples around the disease.


So here was Meghan Daum telling the world that the statement "AIDS has killed love" is not merely applicable to Gay men, as you wrote in your article. It seems to stretch to everybody who's having to deal with sexuality in the current era.

Lauritsen: It's certainly not had a good effect on society's overall attitude towards sex. I think it's horrible that children in grade school are being taught about "safe sex" and, in some cases, are being given condoms before they're even capable of having orgasms. There's something to be said for not having these things prematurely foisted on gradeschool children.
Zenger's: In fact, Debra Chasnoff's film It's Elementary, which about teaching grade-school and middle-school children about Gay issues and the contributions of the Gay community, just premiered in San Diego. At a showing which the director attended, one person commented that there was hardly anything in the film about AIDS--which this person was concerned about, and I must say I found quite refreshing. I actually rather like the idea of children learning about our community without getting foisted either with the minutiae of sex--which I think everybody would agree would be inappropriate for them at those ages--or the incubus of AIDS.
Lauritsen: Yes. I'm sick of AIDS, and I think most Americans are sick of AIDS. And I think this may be something in our favor. It will be hard to sustain the AIDS myth when everybody is sick of the whole thing and doesn't want to hear about it anymore. And so it may be that reality may break through, if from nothing more than simply a collective sense of boredom, although I don't know what form it would take.
I used to think it would be quite explosive once the truth about AIDS gets out. Certainly, given how many tens of thousands of people have died unnecessarily, you would expect that there would be an explosive social reaction. But it may not happen that way. It may be that one day, almost by default, just suddenly it's not really there anymore. I don't know how it will happen, but somehow they will have to extricate themselves from it. It will be kind of messy, but it can't go on this way. There's no way to sustain anything as preposterous as the "HIV/AIDS" myth indefinitely.

v v v