Protesting against the “thou shalt not annoy” laws and in defence of free speech is important, as is opposing the state government’s handout of $86 million of taxpayers’ money for WYD to an extremely wealthy private organisation. A more important reason to protest, though, is the pope’s political agenda.
While the pope’s reactionary utterances on homosexuality, euthanasia, contraception and abortion are generally portrayed as “moral” rather than political viewpoints, this distinction works to undermine democracy. In 1997, for example, a law was passed by federal parliament overturning the legalisation of euthanasia in the Northern Territory, despite 80% of Australians supporting voluntary euthanasia.
Assisting the powerful
Furthermore, the pope, or Cardinal Josef Ratzinger as he was known before becoming “infallible” in 2005, played an active role in the suppression of liberal and anti-imperialist currents within Catholicism in the 1980s and ’90s. In 1981, Ratzinger was appointed head of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith (the successor to the medieval inquisition) by Pope John Paul II.
Ratzinger used the powers at his disposal — banning from teaching, sacking from the priesthood and excommunication from the Church — to silence those who opposed the drive to extinguish the modernising reforms introduced by the Second Vatican Council in 1965.
The main targets of Ratzinger, described in an April 16, 1999 article in the National Catholic Reporter as “the Vatican’s enforcer”, were proponents of liberation theology — the doctrine that the place of the Church was with the poor. In Latin America, liberation theology was an important current in opposition to US imperialism.
In El Salvador, pro-poor Archbishop Oscar Romero was gunned down by a pro-US death squad as he performed mass in 1980, while in Nicaragua, priests served in the left-wing Sandinista government that came to power after the 1979 revolution against US-backed dictator Anastasio Somoza.
More importantly, Christian Base communities established by liberation theologists played an important role in empowering and mobilising the masses throughout Latin America. The Vatican’s suppression of liberation theology assisted in the maintenance of US hegemony over Latin America — although the influence of the doctrine can still be seen in the highly eclectic ideology of Venezuela’s Bolivarian revolution.
The powerful reciprocate
The US has reciprocated by incorporating the puritan sexual politics of John Paul II and Benedict XVI into foreign aid policy. This began in 1984 when then-president Ronald Reagan instituted the “global gag” rule, preventing US development aid going to any organisation that gave out any information on abortion.
This was rescinded by president Bill Clinton’s administration but reinstated by President George Bush on the first day of his administration. Bush expanded the policy to prevent any US aid going to organisations that don’t condemn prostitution and restricting funding for HIV/AIDS prevention to institutions not promoting the abstinence model.
These policies help sabotage the fight against the HIV/AIDS epidemic. Furthermore, serving mammon as well as God, the US has campaigned against the production of cheap, generic drugs and tied US aid to the buying of expensive brand-name drugs to boost the profits of multinational pharmaceutical corporations. Western financial institutions such as the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund even insist that poor countries producing generic drugs pay royalties to the patent-holding corporations.
At the end of 2007, there were approximately 33.2 million people in the world with HIV/AIDS. Over two thirds of these are in sub-Saharan Africa. More than 25 million people have died of AIDS since 1981 — 2.1 million in 2007. Almost 70% of people in the Third World who develop AIDS (as opposed to being just HIV positive) will die due to lack of drugs.
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The number of unnecessary deaths due to US policies cannot be quantified. However, while religious believers have a right to preach that premarital and extramarital sex are immoral (and live their own lives accordingly), to claim, as both Bush and Benedict XVI do, that promoting premarital abstinence and marital fidelity is an effective way of combatting the spread of HIV, or any other sexually transmitted infections (STIs), is a deadly lie.
In September 2007, the New York Civil Liberties Union released a report on abstinence-until-marriage “sex education” programs in New York schools that, despite annual funding of more than US$14 million from state and federal governments, appeared to make no difference to adolescent sexual behaviour in terms of decreasing premarital sex, but left teenagers in New York with higher rates of HIV infection and unwanted pregnancies than in jurisdictions with medically accurate comprehensive sex-education programs.
The NYCLU report pointed to numerous inaccuracies and religious prejudices in the material used in the abstinence-based programs. These ranged from the ridiculous (that AIDS can be spread by French kissing) to the dangerous: exaggerating the medical dangers of abortion and misleadingly suggesting that condoms were not effective in preventing pregnancy or the spread of STIs.
The material demonised homosexuality and reinforced gender roles: one program citing “financial support” as one of the “five major needs of women” and “domestic support” as one of the “five major needs of men”.
Good example undermined
The experience of Uganda, which until recently was one of the few success stories in combatting HIV/AIDS in Africa, graphically illustrates what does and doesn’t work in HIV/AIDS prevention. By the turn of the century the prevalence of AIDS had been reduced to a third of what it was in the early ’90s.
While the Ugandan strategy combined promoting abstinence and fidelity with mass distribution of condoms, the February 24, 2005 San Francisco Chronicle reported that research in the Rakai district suggesting that abstinence and fidelity were actually declining in that region but, thanks to increased condom use, so was the HIV infection rate.
However, in 2003, when Bush launched his $15 billion fund for combatting AIDS globally, the Ugandan experience was cited as an example of the effectiveness of the abstinence-based model. In 2004, Ugandan policy changed, with free condoms being recalled, allegedly for quality-control reasons, and condoms subsequently sold with a high sales tax imposed.
Sam Okware, a senior health ministry official and architect of Uganda’s HIV/AIDS prevention strategy cited the financial imperatives imposed by Bush’s fund as the reason for the policy change, the June 1, 2006 Independent reported. The results have been predictably tragic. By 2005, new HIV infections in Uganda had risen to 130,000 — up from 70,000 in 2002.
The demand that US AIDS/HIV prevention funds only go to organisations that publicly condemn prostitution is equally disastrous given that sex workers are a high risk group, particularly if unable to access condoms. “How can we help the girls if we condemn them?”, Maurisia Ssebuggwawo, a volunteer midwife and health worker in a slum district of Kampala told the Independent.
In 2004, Brazil rejected $40 million in already promised US funding when it was made clear that organisations receiving it would have to denounce prostitution. Brazil’s policies, among the most successful in the world, had involved working closely with high risk groups including sex workers and IV drug users, and had succeeded in limiting the number of HIV-positive Brazilians to half what had been predicted by epidemiologists.
Benedict XVI’s host in Sydney, Cardinal George Pell, hails from the same conservative wing of the Catholic Church as Ratzinger. Like the pope, he periodically makes inflammatory remarks attacking Muslims. He shares the pope's puratanical views on sexuality and has even described AIDS as a form of divine retribution against homosexuals.
However, this inflexibility on sexual morality does not apply to cases of priests sexually assaulting parishioners, including children. Over the past week complaints about Pell’s role in covering up sex abuse scandals have resurfaced. In 2002, at World Youth Day celebrations in Toronto, he explained his attitude: if someone from your parish asks you about the child abuse scandal within the Catholic Church, just tell them that abortion is a worse moral scandal.
Preaching intolerance, practicing hypocrisy and closely tied to the rulers of the world, the likes of Pope Benedict and Cardinal Pell deserve to be targets of protest.
Protest the unholy father
By Rachel Evans
July 12, 2008 - Pope Benedict XVI is coming to town. Sydney is once again to be subject to a special police regime as this saintly, celibate white man bravely preaches the joys of sexual abstinence in the very Circus Maximus of Sin City (Randwick race course). Pope Benedict is also the CEO of a very big company called the Catholic Church. The third largest landowner in the world, if this company were incorporated it would be listed in Australia’s top 10. So this pope is also loaded.
When George Bush, CEO of another very powerful institution, sauntered into Sydney last September, the NSW Labor government snapped to attention, creating massive exclusion zones, placing snipers on rooftops and bringing out the biggest toy in the Australian public order toy chest — the NSW police’s $600,000 water cannon.









Comments
TAC South Africa: Pope's condom statement `irresponsible'
Treatment Action Campaign (South Africa)
On Tuesday 17 March, Pope Benedict XVI visited Cameroon and told
reporters, "You can't resolve with condoms ... On the contrary, it
increases the problem." To view a CNN video clip of the Pope's comments
please click here.
<http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lhxqvVmgEbg&feature=related>
The Pope's comments are irresponsible. The evidence that consistent
condom use is effective at reducing the risk of HIV transmission is
incontrovertible. Below we reprint the abstract of a scientific meeting
that analysed 138 peer-reviewed articles to determine the effectiveness
of condoms at reducing the risk of contracting sexually transmitted
infections (STIs) including HIV. A key finding of the meeting was that
the results of "longitudinal studies of the sexual partners of
HIV-infected persons indicate that consistent condom use reduces the
risk of HIV/AIDS transmission by approximately 85%."
See also:
* Page 15 of our HIV prevention issue of Equal Treatment
<http://www.tac.org.za/documents/et19.pdf%20>
* An article by The Body.com summarising the evidence on the
efficacy <http://www.thebody.com/content/art17057.html>of condom
<http://www.thebody.com/content/art17057.html>s as an HIV
prevention tool <http://www.thebody.com/content/art17057.html>
* A Center for Disease Control (CDC) factsheet on condom
effectiveness <http://www.cdc.gov/condomeffectiveness/latex.htm>
The evidence is considerable that abstinence-only programmes, apparently
favoured by the Pope, are ineffective. The AIDS Research Institute of
the University of California, San Francisco published a monograph in
March 2002 that states:
/An assessment of the peer-reviewed, published research reveals no
evidence that abstinence- only programs delay sexual initiation or
reduce STIs or pregnancy. By contrast, credible research clearly
demonstrates that some comprehensive sex education, or
'abstinence-plus,' programs can achieve positive behavioral changes
among young people and reduce STIs, and that these programs do not
encourage young people to initiate sexual activity earlier or have more
sexual partners. /
The AIDS Research Institute's report can be accessed in full by clicking
here <http://ari.ucsf.edu/science/reports/abstinence.pdf>.
The evidence shows that it is important to distribute condoms and that
it is also important to provide sex education to adolescents that
includes accurate information on how to use condoms (see the second of
the two abstracts below titled "Condom Use Errors and Problems Among
Adolescents").
In Khayelitsha, Cape Town's largest township, TAC activists distribute
in excess of 500,000 condoms every month. A dedicated Khayelitsha
activist is nicknamed the 'Condom King'. As a result, medical officials
in Khayelitsha report that sexually transmitted infections among the
local population have declined. And this is in a poor community with
traditionally high rates of STIs and HIV.
Preaching abstinence to many communities in Africa is alienating and
irrelevant. Many sexual encounters in marginal communities with high
rates of HIV infection are coercive or transactional. In contexts in
which gender inequality is rife, to instruct women to abstain from sex
or to remain faithful to only one partner demonstrates an ignorance of
their sexual realities.
The South African Catholic Bishops Conference (SACBC) is a large
provider of HIV services in South Africa including antiretroviral
treatment. It is concerning that the views of the leader of the Catholic
Church are incongruent with the good work being done by the SACBC.
The following two abstracts mentioned above can be retrieved by
following this link
<http://gateway.nlm.nih.gov/MeetingAbstracts/ma?f=102261955.html>.
*Effectiveness of Male Latex Condoms for HIV/STD Prevention:
Workshop Update*
Kanouse DE; National HIV Prevention Conference (2003 : Atlanta, Ga.).
Abstr Book 2003 Natl HIV Prev Conf July 27 30 2003 Hyatt Regency Atlanta
Hotel Atlanta Ga Natl HIV Prev Conf 2003 Atlanta Ga. 2003; abstract no.
T1-C1301.
RAND, Santa Monica, CA
*BACKGROUND/OBJECTIVES:* In June 2000, four federal agencies (U. S.
Agency for International Development, Food and Drug Administration,
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, National Institutes of
Health) co-sponsored a workshop to evaluate the published evidence
establishing the effectiveness of male latex condoms in preventing
HIV/AIDS and 7 other STDS.
*METHODS:* The scientific scope of the workshop was limited to the
effectiveness of male latex condoms for use during penile-vaginal
intercourse for reducing the risk of transmission of 8 STDs: HIV
infection, gonorrhea, chlamydial infection, syphilis, chancroid,
trichomoniasis, genital herpes caused by herpes simplex viruses (HSV) 1
and 2, and genital human papillomavirus (HPV) infection and HPV disease.
Condom effectiveness was defined to mean the level of protection against
STDs when condoms are used correctly and consistently. The panel
examined only peer-reviewed, published articles (n = 138).
*RESULTS:* Male latex condoms were found in laboratory tests to be of
high quality. Viral penetration assays demonstrate that condoms provide
a highly effective barrier against the smallest STD organisms. Data on
condom use suggest that method failure (breakage/slippage) occurs in
about 3% of coital acts and is related to user knowledge and experience.
Studies of the effectiveness of condoms to reduce the risk of
transmission through intercourse are methodologically much stronger for
HIV/AIDS than for other STDs. Results of longitudinal studies of the
sexual partners of HIV-infected persons indicate that consistent condom
use reduces the risk of HIV/AIDS transmission by approximately 85%.
Studies on the effectiveness of condom use for preventing transmission
of gonorrhea were limited either by retrospective design, inadequate
measures of condom use, or small sample sizes. However, several studies
demonstrated a protective effect of condoms for men, and the pane l
concluded that collectively these studies demonstrated that consistent
and correct condom use would reduce the risk of gonorrhea for men, with
insufficient evidence available for women. The panel reviewed 12 studies
that addressed condom effectiveness for prevention of chlamydial
infection and found the results inconclusive. One limited study found a
30% reduction in trichomonas infection among women attending an STD
clinic who reported using condoms as a method of contraception, but
further studies are needed to arrive at an accurate assessment of risk
reduction. Limitations in study design or paucity of data prevented the
panel from forming any conclusions regarding the effectiveness of
condoms for HSV 1 or 2, chancroid, or syphilis. For HPV, the panel found
no evidence that condom use reduces the risk of HPV infection, but some
evidence that condom use might reduce the risk of HPV-associated diseases.
*CONCLUSIONS:* Consistent use of male latex condoms reduces risk of HIV
transmission between men and women and reduces the risk of gonorrhea
transmission in men. Recent studies not reviewed by the panel provide
evidence of condom effectiveness against transmission of HSV and
chlamydial infection. These findings can be represented in various ways.
Promoting correct and consistent condom use should be a key part of a
comprehensive prevention strategy that also includes other messages
aimed at reducing STD/HIV incidence.
*Condom Use Errors and Problems Among Adolescents*
Crosby, RA Emory University, Atlanta, GA
*BACKGROUND:* Condom promotion programs delivered to adolescents are a
central feature of public health efforts to reduce the incidence of HIV
and other sexually transmitted infections. Unfortunately, researchers
and practitioners have largely ignored a critical aspect of condom use
promotion.
*OBJECTIVE:* To assess the prevalence and selected correlates of condom
errors and problems as experienced by males and females 14 to 24 years
of age.
*METHODS:* Data from three distinct samples was analyzed: African
American adolescent females, undergraduates from a large Midwestern
university and from a Southern university. Assessed errors included
slippage during withdrawal, incorrect and incomplete application of
condoms, starting sex before condoms were applied, removing condoms
before sex was over, reusing condoms, and lack of adequate lubrication.
Assessed problems included loss of erection, slippage during sex, and
breakage. Significance was defined by an alpha of .05. Correlates were
tested in a multivariate logistic regression models. Data (collected
from the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent Health) relative to
misinformation about correct condom use was also analyzed.
*RESULTS:* Condom use errors and problems were commonly reported. Errors
related to incomplete use and incorrect applications were especially
common. Problems related to erection, slippage, and breakage were also
very common. Significant correlates included gender, instruction on
condom use, motivation to use condoms, and frequency of condom use.
*CONCLUSIONS:* Condom use errors and problems among adolescents are
common and may be amenable to behavioral intervention. Implications for
the design, delivery, and evaluation of improved condom use promotion
programs will be discussed.
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