Cyberyeti, on 2013-January-10, 05:20, said:
There are numerous instances of Catholic agencies going into poor African countries and while distributing aid, promoting abstinence rather than condoms. Of course the people had sex anyway without them and AIDS spread more than it would have done otherwise although less people died of starvation.
Whether an organization is religious or not makes no difference to me if they're doing good. When they start spreading their beliefs at the expense of the best interests of the population I draw the line.
I have this argument heared quite often. And I guess I will be flamed for this, but:
1. If there is a correlation between AIDS and being catholic, it is inverse. The african countries with the lowest numbers of victims have usually a quite high number of catholic believers. (I just talk about middle and south africa, north afica is different for more then one reason...) The country with the highest number of victims is south africa with quite a small catholic population. I do not claim that there is a correlation, but noone can claim that it is the other way round.
2. I guess we can agree that abstinence is by far the best way to avoid Aids. So how shall the priest/socail worker work? Tell their sheeps that they have to be abstinent, but if they are not, they should at least use a condom?
This makes the strict rule much less strict.
This is like: Listen Kid, there is a big lake over there and you cannot swim. Do not go there. But look, here are some swimming aids, just in case that you will go anyway.
You won't do that to your kids, will you? I won't.
So you have two possibilities: Accept that many people do not choose the best way to avoid AIDS, but will have sex anyway. So you try to give swim aids to anyone, which is surely the secondbest way...
Or you try everything to show them your (catholic) view and convince them from the best way to avoid this disease- which luckily happens to be the right way of living anyway (in your catholic mind) and try to convice them not to go to the lake.
I see no numbers which support that the first way is saving more lives then the second, it is just our feeling that it must be handled this (first) way...