helene_t, on 2020-February-10, 16:40, said:
Nigel, I am sure you meant to say that the government (or whoever implemented HIV policies) should have done whatever it takes to prevent people from getting infected, which would obviously primarily be in the interest of risk groups.
Yes. That is what I said.
helene_t, on 2020-February-10, 16:40, said:
But there are two problems with your post: "Political correctness": This is a terrible expression which you shouldn't use unless you are communicating to people who you know will interpret the term the way you intend it. To many people (including me) , "political correctness" is an expression used to justify discrimination against minorities.
I respect your opinion, Helene_T, Nevertheless, IMO, in some circumstances, authorities are right to discriminate in favor of minorities.
helene_t, on 2020-February-10, 16:40, said:
"Isolation": It is a very oppressive thing to do to force people into isolation. You should really think twice before you suggest such a thing. If you talked to some people who have been involved in the work on containing HIV in the 90s, they would be able to explain you why isolation (with the exception of some extreme cases such as imprisoned HIV-positive serial rapist) would not only be inhumane but also completely contraproductive. But that's not so much the point. The point is that it is offensive.
IMO, at the start of the AIDS/HIV disaster, it would have been better for everybody, if authorities had undertaken a truthful public education program, targeting homosexual males and drug-users, with quarantine facilities, condoms, clean needles, etc.
A modern analogy. if (when?) I'm diagnosed with Coranavirus, I hope that I'm treated appropriately, isolated from family and friends, while infectious. Arguably, had we repatriated fewer British from China, the virus might have spread more slowly, giving experts more time to investigate and develop an effective treatment.