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
 
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.
Disclosing they have HIV requires "bravery" and puts them in "jeopardy" because of the "stigma"... well, I'd think that if anything were to be deserving of some stigma, it's having a communicable disease that, if untreated, has a fatality rate of over 90%, is communicable by buttsex, and spreads specifically because sufferers are known to lie about having it. What are they afraid of? Are they at risk of getting beaten to death by roving gangs? Being hauled off to an internment camp for bugchasers? Being permanently banned from any and all means of accessing healthcare or employment? Having "AIDS FAGGOT" branded on their foreheads?

“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.
Nope, none of that, the "stigma" and "trauma" they're so worried about is the possibility that, if you admit you have HIV, people on the internet may be disinclined from having casual, unprotected, profligate sex with you. You've got to be fucking kidding me. My first inclination is to say that troons and fags need to police their own communities, and that if giving someone AIDS tended to result in being mysteriously beaten to death with a tire iron, it may serve as a deterrent... but I'm pretty sure tranny hookers already get themselves killed for this, and the queers just use them to cry oppression by bandying about those statistics after deliberately stripping them of context.

Anyway, it is telling that the people who cry about the "stigma" of HIV are always faggots, hard drug users, and generally unapologetic about their degenerate behavior. In other words, the stigma exists precisely because of them in the first place. You never hear a fucking word from people who actually have some right to be upset about it, like people born with HIV because their mother had it, people who received a contaminated blood transfusion 30 years ago, or health care workers who got it on the job.
 
Like the tranny shit, advocating sodomy and the destigmatizing of AIDS is creating millions of people who will be dependent on pharmaceuticals for the rest of their lives
And sets us up for a shitty situation as HIV develops drug resistance faster due to so many more pozloaded people, making it much more likely we end up back in the situation before these treatments where HIV was just a precursor to an inevitably fatal AIDS case. Instead of being careful with this newfound escape from a horrible death, they're just doubling down on the degeneracy.

Social focus might be on walking back Troons right now, but the rest of the LGB really needs to address the behavior of the G before they end up as the next target of "We tried, you proved the slippery slope right".
 
Fun LGBTQIAAP+ fact: You can avoid AIDS by not being a massive fucking degenerate faggot.
Impossible. Remember when it was a crime to go for a jog during covid and it was suggested that fags postpone their orgies for a little while to prevent the spread of at least one disease, and they had conniption fits?
 
Impossible. Remember when it was a crime to go for a jog during covid and it was suggested that fags postpone their orgies for a little while to prevent the spread of at least one disease, and they had conniption fits?
Remember when monkeypox was going to be COVID 2.0 but the media buried it once it was undeniable that it was a homosexual STD and kids/dogs in gay households started getting it?
 
Remember when monkeypox was going to be COVID 2.0 but the media buried it once it was undeniable that it was a homosexual STD and kids/dogs in gay households started getting it?
No, Monkeypox is just smallpox. it's a smallpox strain from monkeys. They managed to make it into a homosexual STD via one of their running narratives about stigma spreading it like they fucking did with HIV. I'm fucking getting tired of people responding to the BS narratives by parroting the narratives but "oh no see this is why gays are bad" Nigger it's smallpox, whether you're getting that shit from sexing people or not it's a disease that's spreading from skin to skin contact or coming into contact with infected skinflakes or whatever the fuck. You're 100% gonna get it if you sex with someone that has it because you're fucking rubbing against them. There were cartoonishly morbid PSAs during the monkeypox thing that framed gay sex orgies while having it as being okay as long as you used prep like the HIV shit, referencing stuff like "piggy parties". It's the same method of spreading horrible diseases by framing it as a stigma thing, they did the same shit with COVID for a bit too where they framed it like only asians could get it but then later framed that as a racist only thing once peopel started parroting the narrative. Niggers being played like a fucking skinflute.

It's really fucking weird how like shortly before corona outbreak happened and even after, a lot of the medical industry and "activism groups" seem to line up with bug chaser/gift givers goals of just getting people infected with horrible diseases, and they also use weird flip floppy victimization narratives to do it.

Fun LGBTQIAAP+ fact: You can avoid AIDS by not being a massive fucking degenerate faggot.
You can legally get it from blood transfusions now, so that advice won't help there. otherwise yeah, don't fuck someone unless you know they don't have HIV. It's like herpes, you just don't touch that shit.
 
As a gay , let me spell it out: on hookup apps, “clean” means no HIV, no STDs, and no drug use. It’s not a moral claim, it’s a filter. But so much of gay discourse now is just borrowed progressive language, mostly from straight women trying to guilt-trip men into finding them attractive. That same logic gets awkwardly copy-pasted into gay spaces—“no fats, no femmes,” “masc4masc,” etc. and doesn’t stick. People still behave exactly how they want. Sorry if having HIV makes some guys exclude you as a partner, but that’s not oppression, that’s desire. No one owes you attraction.
 
Why do the gays insist on being a vector for this disease?

No faggot, you need a stigma for this, its the mark of a degen, as you only get AIDS from either buttsex or needle drugs. If you're not doing completely degenerate things, your risk of AIDS is almost zero.

If I were a more religious person, I would literally call it God's punishment for indulging in degenerate behavior.
 
In 2020 a gay male friend and I went on vacation. We got in an argument over masking. I said even if it was slowing the spread, the psychological effects it was having on society as a whole would be far worse. He essentially called me an inconsiderate edge lord. On that same trip he had unprotected sex with two strangers he met on Grindr.
 
Faggots are so fucking retarded that they don't seem to realize that straight people also don't want to fuck a person with HIV. You could give me a 10/10 chick and I'm not fucking her if she has HIV.
You are the weird ones where sex is so important to your lifestyle that people refusing to have sex with someone who has an incurable deadly disease is a slight against your existence.
 
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