Africoons & AIDS

Tyrone N. Butts

APE Reporter
Rural African men claim AIDS as sign of masculinity

Attitudes towards AIDS in rural Africa are complex and often contradictory, says Dr Amy Kaler from the University of Alberta's Faculty of Arts.

Kaler investigated the ways that young men in rural southern Malawi, Africa talk about HIV and their own perceptions of risk. The U of A sociologist studied journals kept by people working with the Malawi Diffusion and Ideational Change Project (MDICP), in which they wrote down every conversation, casual chat or passing reference about AIDS.

In communities in southern Malawi, wher
HIV prevalence is estimated at roughly 13%, young men are often conflicted as to whether they will be able to avoid contracting AIDS. Some say that they do not believe they will be alive in five years' tim
e, while others say that by exe
rcising self-discipline and relying on inner strength, they will be able to live out a good life.

Kaler also claims that the relationship between AIDS and masculinity is more complex than has been previously thought. While young men actually want to have AIDS, the behaviours that put young men at risk for HIV ' being sexually active with lots of partners ' are the same behaviours that give men high status among their peers. Young men often boasted to their friends about their likelihood of being HIV+, as a way of boasting about the number of girlfriends they had had. For example, one man went so far as to correct another by saying that he had slept with all the desirable girls in one particular village so if anybody is going to be the cause of
an AIDS outbreak it would be him.


In many settings, AIDS is associated with shame and guilt but in other contexts such as male homosocial groups, the virus may take on different meanings,
said Kaler. Given the relative homoge
neity of masculinity scripts around the world, with emphasis on both heterosexual activity and taking risks, I doubt that these Malawian men are unique.

Kaler also found that for many men, their beliefs about the virulence of AIDS are not consistent with current medical understanding of the disease.

They assume, first, that it is everywhere and will eventually kill everyone and second, that AIDS is extremely infective and that if one has been exposed to the virus, one's days are numbered, writes Kaler in an article published in the journal Demographic Research. This understanding of AIDS risk may be used to justify continuing such risky sexual behaviour as having multiple partners or not using condoms--this behaviour is no longer dangerous if one believ
es he has already contracted the virus, said Kaler.

The fact that so many claim that they are HIV-positive and appear to use this belief as a justification for continued unsafe sex has major
implications for future research
and HIV prevention education, says Kaler.

***************
Gotta love it!


T.N.B.
 
4

..true "thinking people" know that obesity is not one's own fault,
it's the fault of society. It's almost as if we are being told,
"watch the show, and learn!"


http://www.mises.org/fullstory.aspx?control=1573

Are We Really Force Fed?

by P. Gardner Goldsmith

[Posted July 30, 2004]

W
are advised that America is experiencing an "Obesity Epidemic", as if it is some sort of contagious disease. Government "officials" tell us that Americans are becoming obese at an alarm

ing rate; they appear on network news programs warning of the health consequences of being overweight. Politicians talk about taxing fattening foods to stop us from harming ourselves. Meanwhile, morning news programs and pop-culture magazines promulgate the claims, and back them with anecdotes, personal stories, and offers for weight loss products that
can change one's life.

Perhaps nowhere was this more in evidence than on ABC in June. For an entire week, ABC's "World News Tonight", and "Nightline" devoted as much attention as possible to the terrible trend towards morbid obesity in America. Culminating over a year of government warnings that began in January of 2003, the floridly titled, "Critical Condition: America's Obesity Crisis" criticized fast food
restaurants, advertisers, private insurance companies, employers and, of course, free will.

At the same time, the features sang the praises of such ideas as taxing fattening foods, and using
gov
ernment programs to combat this pressing emergency.

The high point came on June 2, when correspondent Michelle Martin appeared on "Nightline" to sum up the entire ABC perspective.

Introduced by the urbane and restrained man of journalistic ethics, Ted Koppel, the program began with a derogatory cut on talk radio, where, Mr. Koppel said, he enjoyed "listening to the verbal agility of the
host and the absolute certainty with which he plunges into areas about which he clearly knows nothing."

This implied that Mr. Koppel knew something the talk host did not, which is clearly what we ought to assume, since Mr. Koppel is, after all, Mr. Koppel.

He went on:

"Anyway, I gather that my friend, the radio host, was put out by the notion that obesity might be the r
esponsibility of anyone other than the obese person"â┚¬Ã…¡ÃƒÆ’”�Å¡¦ This was one of those classic rants about freedom and responsibility. We are all free, in other words, to eat whatever we want. And, if
we beco
me grossly overweight, it is our own responsibility and nobody else's"â┚¬Ã…¡ÃƒÆ’”�Å¡¦ Bluntly stated, if you're fat, it's your own damn fault. There is some truth to that. But if, for example, you are poor, live in the inner city, and have no transportation of your own, you are significantly more likely to be obese, than if you are well-off, drive your own car and live in the suburbs. And while education does make a difference, its not the key factor. Take a look at what 'Nightline' producer Marie Nelson and correspondent Michel Martin found."

The core of the ABC argument was thus stylishly presented, or, to be more precise, it was deftly implied. According to Ted Koppel, Marie Nelson, Michel Martin and "Nightline", true "thinking people" know that obesity is not one&#39
;s own fault, it's the fault of society. It's almost as if we are being told, "watch the show, and learn!"

Well, let's study the major portions of th
e presentati
on"â┚¬Ã…¡ÃƒÆ’”�Å¡¦.......


Rest of article at link:

http://www.mises.org/fullstory.aspx?control=1573
 
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