Culture Are you clean?” should be banned from Grindr – and we all have a role in making it happen - As I Kissed a Boy’s Adam shares his experience of dating living with HIV, it’s time to take on the stigma.

This series of I Kissed a Boy is more fun and sexy than ever, but also the bravest yet in spotlighting the issues our community faces. It’s a sun-soaked fantasy, where there is always a handsome housekeeper round the corner, a Minogue on tap and a secret garden for a not-so-secret tryst, but at its heart, it’s all about people’s very real lives.

We have watched with joy at contestant Lars opening up about life as a gay trans man (and subsequently with horror at some of the transphobic responses). Now, in the latest episode, Adam, marketing manager from Reading, shared with the other contestants that he was living with HIV. All dating requires vulnerability, but stigma around HIV adds jeopardy when telling anyone, let alone potential partners. The other boys called him ‘brave’ – it shouldn’t be so, but when you consider only one-in-eight people living with HIV has told most friends and family, you see it really is something to tell the whole country on a BBC television show.

In a moving moment, Adam spoke about how his medication means he lives a healthy life, and that by taking one pill a day he can be sure he won’t pass it on during sex. Terrence Higgins Trust is loud and proud about how HIV has changed and the latest science. We’ve just launched a new and sexy campaign in Brighton, which shares the message that people living with HIV on treatment can’t pass it on during sex. With public support, we hope we can take it national.

In Dannii Minogue’s dating villa, Adam shares his journey to understanding what it means to live with HIV and, most poignantly, the persistent stigma he faces, particularly on dating apps.

“Are you clean?” is a phrase familiar to anyone who uses Grindr. It’s used to ask about someone’s sexual health, but more specifically about their HIV status. It’s a phrase that is so casually cruel. As Adam puts it on the show, “Does that make me dirty because I have HIV?”

Adam’s experience speaks to the heart of how we connect as a community. For a huge number of us, dating and hook-up apps are a key part of how we meet people, express our sexuality and form relationships. They should be space for fun and for pleasure – and for most of us, they are. We don’t talk enough about how they can be space that perpetuate stigma and trauma for people living with HIV. And often racism, transphobia and body-shaming too.

So, to those who still don’t quite get it, let me spell it out: having HIV does not make someone dirty. Our community has borne the significant burden of HIV, and homophobia and HIV stigma are close cousins. When we let this cruel language persist, we harm people living with HIV, but we also harm our whole community.

This is just the tip of the iceberg of the stigma that people with HIV too often face on dating apps. At the height of It’s a Sin mania, Luke Kelly told his friends and everyone on Instagram he was living with HIV. The response was amazing. Days later he included his HIV status on his Grindr profile, thinking that the positivity would continue. Within three days, this handsome man who had done many a modelling gig, had changed it back because of the scale and relentlessness of the abuse he received.

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Dating and hook-up apps need to step up and act now. They need to update their community guidelines to specifically prohibit phrases like “Are you clean?”, the apps should educate their users on why they’re making this change and repeat offenders should be banned.

But a technology fix alone won’t cut it: this is about how we treat each other. We – the users of those apps – also need to reflect. If you, like me, got teary on your sofa watching Adam talk about what he has been through, or if you think of yourself as an ally to people living with HIV, then be the change you want to see.

It is obviously legitimate to ask about how people protect their sexual health and potentially yours. Check if they have tested recently and know their status. Legit to ask if they use condoms, and if not, are they on PrEP or HIV medication. It’s good to lead with your recent test date and prevention tool of choice, but not “Are you clean”.

If someone asks you the dreaded question or has other stigmatising language about HIV in their profile, challenge them. And if they don’t change it? Block them, report them, move on.

Adam was greeted with love and understanding when he shared his status in the masseria. Every person living with HIV deserves the same. As a community, we need to step up to make that happen. One kiss at time.

Archive: https://archive.ph/vrWxG
 
Imagine being such a sex-crazed pervert that you can't keep it in your pants long enough to determine whether the man about to blast your ass bareback has a deadly venereal disease... The faggots have demonstrated time and again their lust is stronger than their sense of self preservation, and frankly, we should allow the consequences of this to occur naturally.
 
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"So, to those who still don’t quite get it, let me spell it out: having Nurgle's Rot does not make someone a heretic. Our community has cherished the significant blessing of Grandfather's joyous creations, and ataxophobia and Imperial stigma are close cousins. When we let this cruel language persist, we harm the Adeptus Astartes, but we also harm all of humanity.

I was greeted with love and understanding when I accepted Nurgle's gift. Every person living in the Imperium deserves the same. As a community, we need to step up to make that happen. One kiss at time."
 
Birth control pills, which have been around for decades and are constantly being refined, still have a success rate of 99% when taken properly. Improbable things can happen, and we expect everyone who's undetectable to follow a strict regimen? Fucking huge X to doubt.

Even if HIV/AIDS isn't the death sentence that it was back in the 70s and 80s, it's still disgusting to force upon someone a medical routine who wouldn't have needed one in the first place.
 
Adam spoke about how his medication means he lives a healthy life,
It doesn’t though. It has significant side effects and is slowly frying his kidneys and liver. His risk for later dementia and cardiac problems is much higher as well.
and that by taking one pill a day he can be sure he won’t pass it on during sex.
And again, he can’t. He can know it reduces the chances but it’s not zero. HIV is slowly evolving around PreP, the drugs have nasty side effects and HIV even under good control still harms you.
They are really pushing this idea that a few tablets makes you clean as a whistle when the virus is still there, just suppressed somewhat.
We cannot get a genuinely lethal in a fast way STD passed on by anal sex fast enough.
 
I'm so fucking tired of (((them))) trying to normalise being a filthy aids infected faggot. A hiv diagnosis should come with a mandatory prison sentence in purpose built prisons that only hold diseased "people".
The only drug commercials that have ever actually disgusted me are the HIV ones. Having HIV is not something we as a society should just accept.
 
The only drug commercials that have ever actually disgusted me are the HIV ones. Having HIV is not something we as a society should just accept.
Prescription drug commercials on American TV are absolutely wild, one of the few things in the US that came close to giving me culture shock.
 
Prescription drug commercials on American TV are absolutely wild, one of the few things in the US that came close to giving me culture shock.

The worst part is they're usually some abstract bullshit like some old fart trying to play in the yard with their grandkids or some lady looking discomfortable at a desk. Very seldom is the commercial about whatever it treats.

The medication itself is even worse. Oh, you get headaches frequently? Take this. Side effects may include dizziness, nausea, diarrhea, fatigue, loss of sight or hearing, heart attack, stroke, lower blood pressure, lower ability to fight infections, trouble breathing, hair loss, discolored stool, cancer, and in rare cases death. Also, hope you got insurance or else it'll cost a rent payment to get that little bottle refilled.
 
Mind boggling. The problem with having a disease is the disease. The stigma around people with the disease is directly downstream of the symptoms of the disease. We can't pretend the stigma is its own, independently evolved bigotry, and treat it in a vacuum, while ignoring the real problem.

Any guesses how these "people" would feel if their date revealed they were unvaccinated and had covid? I bet some stigmatizing behaviors would emerge...
 
it's still disgusting to force upon someone a medical routine who wouldn't have needed one in the first place.
One that if you arent taking expensive meds constantly you will fucking die, mind you.

The only drug commercials that have ever actually disgusted me are the HIV ones. Having HIV is not something we as a society should just accept.
There's also the ones where it's like old people anti-stress medicine or something where they're like "oh my mom started forgetting things and yelling and swearing at me, maybe she has dementia so i called her doctor and got reczulti (or whatever the fuck it's called) and now we're great!" and then the side effects listed really quickly are shit like actual brain melting type shit. i dunno something about stress and family argument=dementia=MEDS NOW BUY MEDS NOW rubs me all the wrong ways especially when like framed through a "wholesome" faux emotional retelling of events that never really happened.

But yeah this trend and push the last several years of how "oh HIV is stigmatized oh noooo" is fucking diabolical especially when you consider the fact there's entire openly bragging internet "communities" where people have actively for decades tried infecting others with it knowing how crippling it is. The stigma isn't people being gay, it's people not wanting to live a half life and be the medical industry's bitch forever.
 
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The faggots have demonstrated time and again their lust is stronger than their sense of self preservation, and frankly, we should allow the consequences of this to occur naturally.
Except they want society, all taxpayers, to bear the onus of their disgusting sexual habits.
 
All the arguing and banter over lolcows and tranny stuff is really just practice, training for real issues like this.

You, a permanently infected person, are not entitled access to unwilling victims. You are not allowed to censor others to hide your condition and infect them. AIDS and HIV would cease to exist if you stopped spreading it.
 
Imagine how many involuntary diseases we might have cured with the resources that have gone into keeping disgusting shit-fucking fags from infecting each other with Just Desserts: Anal Edition.
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(that bill was primarily authored by Scott Wiener, a gay Jew who takes pills daily to stop the transmission of HIV).
 
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