How can you get over 90% of homosexuals to voluntarily stop engaging in homosexual sex?

All you have to do is diligently and consistently enforce the laws of general equity. Homosexuality thrives in an environment of personal irresponsibility that’s soft on crime and tolerates blame-shifting by those who should be held responsible for their actions.

The homosexualist response to the case below about releasing the picture of an HIV-positive man charged with sexual assault is a case in point. The homosexualist response is that people engaged in homosexual sex might add offence to offence by not getting tested to determine their disease status if they know it might result in their picture being made public if they are accused of a crime. It’s also worth noting that if homosexuals are not disproportionately involved in crime, then this shouldn’t be an issue for homosexuals any more than for everyone else.

At any rate, at the end of the day, what this controversy demonstrates is that public homosexuality thrives in a culture of blame-shifting that embraces personal irresponsibility instead of self-government. If governments, including courts, prosecuted those guilty of offences to the full extent of the law, and if private contractual law was upheld, such that in every relevant context, personal responsibility was enforced, it is very likely that the deterrent effect would eliminate 90% or more of public homosexuality and other forms of sexual immorality. (We commend the decision of the Ottawa police in this case.)

The Ottawa Sun – November 18, 2010
Police stand by release of HIV perp photo
By Tony Spears

Given another Steven Paul Boone, cops would still release his picture. Boone, accused of not disclosing his HIV-positive status to sex partners, awaits trial on multiple counts of aggravated sexual assault and attempted murder. Police handling of the file was harshly criticized by members of the queer community, prompting an internal review. Police had released Boone’s photo after a complaint from an 18-year-old man who subsequently tested positive for HIV.

Chief Vern White will now personally decide how much information to release about alleged high-risk offenders. “Each case would be addressed on their own merits,” said Insp. Joan McKenna, co-chairwoman of the Ottawa Police Liaison committee. Photographs of accused high-risk offenders will still be released “where significant risk to the public exists,” she said.

Jeremy Dias, gay rights activist and founder of diversity group Jer’s Vision, was unimpressed. He believes Boone’s treatment will only discourage people from getting tested. “If you don’t get tested, you can’t know your status,” he said. If you don’t know your status, you can’t be prosecuted for knowingly infecting someone. “(Cops are) scaring the community away from responsible behaviour,” he said. “This will actually increase risk.”

Read the rest here.