Sabrina Deep- AHF’s Attack is Against Porn, Not Safety

IMPOSING CONDOMS IS NOT THE SOLUTION

OP/ED by Sabrina Deep

If you don’t know what we are talking about, here, this is a quick recap. A few days ago an adult performer was reported to have tested HIV positive and the industry wisely started a self-imposed moratorium on shooting new material until a full investigation is conducted in order to find out who are all the performers involved in the case and, in case, quarantine them.

Here it comes the AIDS Healthcare Foundation, a global organization providing cutting-edge medicine and advocacy to over 100,000 people in 22 countries, which raises concerns about the adult industry and calls for imposing the mandatory use of condoms in all the shootings. Although i’m not against the use of condoms at all and as an adult performer myself i aim to reach 100% of safety in my working enviroment, let me explain you why i believe that the AHC Foundation is moved by political reasons rather than by safety concerns.

Yes, the AHC Foundation battle against bareback sex in the adult industry looks to me just like a plain and straight attack against porn rather than a sincere attempt to protect the adult performers’ safety.
Let’s see why.

They want to impose (a word very much appreciated by politicians) the use of condoms because, they claim, it is the only and most effective method to prevent cases like the above one in the adult industry. Like the politicians love to do, they just tell you their side of the story, omitting a series of important facts.

When you impose something, you create room for the law breakers and, since here we are talking about health, the results of breaking the law can be much worse than those produced by the actual system. We will have unscrupulous people offering more money to desperate and silly performers to perform without a condom and at that point current tests will become an option as well in those law breaking situations.

According to several reputable studies (ie. R.A. Hatcher, Contraceptive Technology, 1998, p. 329.) condoms break on average two percent of the time during intercourse or withdrawal and the percentage of a condom slipping during intercourse is even bigger. These percentages rise significantly with anal intercourse. They rise even more when a vaginal or anal intercourse follow a fellatio.

You might object that a mandatory test AND a mandatory condom used together would lower the risk significantly and it is a good objection except for the fact that if you seriously impose the two things together, then you must also impose a ban, among others, to the following:

– fingering (or only with condoms? With gloves?)
- cunnilinguus (please don’t even think about a solution…)
- cumshots
- tits sucking

making shooting porn practically impossible, except if we are all dressed in latex.
And that’s exactly my point: do you want to protect the performers’ safety or do you want to shut the adult industry down?

Because if it’s the health of performers that you have in mind, there are other ways than imposing the use of condoms and they even don’t exclude a progressive increment in the self-induced use of condoms by adult performers.

The AHC foundation itself knows the way so well that it even suggests it in his polemic and political statements of these days, but the problem is that with this solution the adult industry could continue to exist and then someone’s dream to shut it down would remain just a dream and therefore AHC prefer to scream against the lack of use of condoms.

So what is the most obvious, the most democratic, the most attemptive to the interests of an industry which moves billions of dollars of TAXED revenue solution? Don’t laugh: It’s an HIV test!

Two rapid tests take 40 minutes and they are sufficient to determine if someone is positive as claimed by AHC Foundation here.

So, why the AHC Foundation does not propose an additional HIV test on the set, performed and checked by professional and trained paramedics, rather than aiming at imposing the use of condoms? Rapid tests exist, they are cheap, they are affective and reliable and special arrangements and deals could be set with the adult industry to adopt such a system.

A test on site, together with the existing test system would keep bogus tests and criminal performers away from the sets, it would lower the risk of contagion significantly and it would allow the adult industry to survive.
Of course without excluding a sensibilization campaign towards a not imposed use of condoms which alone is simply a false solution to the problem.

The problem is there, it exists and nobody denies it. We work in this industry and we care for our safety equally and more than AHC does, but instrumental campaigns against our industry will not fix the problem, ever. And dear people at the AHC Foundation: these days campaign against our industry smells instrumental and political to me; your call to impose condoms is superficial and it is not backed by anything but a mere personal view. You clearly didn’t do your homework about our industry, you didn’t interview their workers, you didn’t analyze the stats, you didn’t try to understand the problem and yet you want to impose a solution to something you don’t know anything about.

I want to conclude with a couple of numbers: since 2004 about 120,000 adult movies have been shot in the porn valley, without counting the hundreds of thousands of Internet scenes shot; well, since 2004 there have been 4 overt hiv cases in the industry.

According to the Department of Health of the Government of United States, the state of New York has the bigger number of diagnosed-with-HIV cases: California is 2nd and Florida 3rd and they are followed very close by prude Texas (where if you shoot porn they shoot you) in 4th position; consider that California counts 50% more inhabitants than Texas and 60% more than New York.

Clearly the claim that the adult industry is responsible for AIDS outbreaks is false. I would warmly invite the people at the AHC Foundation to invest some money in sensibilizing prude parents and anti-porn campaigners to educate their kids about the risk of contracting AIDS when after a night out binge-drinking they screw the first stranger who propose to them at 3 in the morning.

Can you try for once to forget the immense amount of money that you get from influential lobbies and stop being political and rather sit down with us and have a propositive and constructive discussion, people at AHC Foundation? Are you free enough to stick to your mission of AIDING and leave the mission of judging and destroying to politicians and lobbies?

Sabrina Deep

11 thoughts on “Sabrina Deep- AHF’s Attack is Against Porn, Not Safety

  1. Michael Whiteacre says:

    I’d like to compliment and congratulate Sabrina on her analysis of AHF, but I’d also make one addition/correction:

    I think AHF would LOVE to see the City of Los Angeles require an AHF “nurse” to show up on sets and administer a Rapid test to performers.

    The problem with Rapid tests, as I describe in my post and comments below, is that it’s the wrong (and inferior) tool for the job (as we learned in the documentary “House of Numbers”, cheaper and faster is better, right?)

    A Rapid tests is an ELISA anti-body test, with a window period of 3 to 6 months. It’s about 95% accurate at 90 days. The PCR-DNA is 95% accurate at TEN days.

    Anyone who walks away from a negative ELISA test and feels safe is delusional unless they’ve had no sexual partners in half a year. This is hardly workable for the adult community.

  2. pstar692002 says:

    Very well said Sabina. Another thing that should be brought up is that. Cross over talent that do straight and gay porn probably have a TTS test or other “straight” Industry standard. But when they work with male talent in the gay industry. The Gay Industry only requires a rapid test. Which again is only 95% accurate at 90 days. And yes they use Condoms. But on the other hand condoms break all the time especially with anal sex. And if you are a male talent working with other male talent you are probably Bi, so you probably sleep with other men that are not in the Industry, and not tested every 30 days.

    So Maybe the Industry needs to stop using Male Cross-Over talent. Cause with the last HIV scare and the recent one it has been a male Cross-over talent!

  3. Michael, you keep making the same point within these various comment boxes, and it remains wholly relevant.
    With your previous legal experience, could you not, conceivably, spearhead some sort of PAC?

  4. Michael Whiteacre says:

    @Randal X – Thank you. It’s been suggested too me before, and quite a bit of late. For now I’m just trying to get the facts, and my perspective on these issues, out there.

    At the moment, I’m working on an article commissioned by a national magazine, so between that, the latest round of (staggering) interviews for the Lubben documentary, my recent root canals, my upcoming court date vs. Tara the buffet killer, and the plans for my impending birthday, my plate is kinda full right now.

    I will revisit the idea soon because I think such a PAC — founded in Libertarian principles — is a great, timely idea. Invading armies can be resisted, Victor Hugo once wrote, but nothing can stop an idea whose time has come.

    Check out today’s article from the Competitive Enterprise Institute:

    http://www.openmarket.org/2011/09/02/a-condom-mandate-is-no-benefit-for-adult-film-actors/

  5. Well, well. I followed you down the rabbit hole, and that article really encapsulates it, doesn’t it? Fact packed and concise. I’ll also read the other two posted links, tho I’m not looking to become sucked into the quicksand of linkland.
    As you posit, a rethink may be on the cards: but, from what you’ve revealed of your real existence, on here, you seem to be a hell of a networker. If time allows, you could be a real muff microcosm Rumsfeld. Perhaps, in a good way..

  6. Michael Whiteacre says:

    I certainly HOPE in a good way. LOL

  7. Michael Whiteacre says:

    @pstar692002 – Or maybe the gay side of the industry needs to start universally testing with something like the APHSS standards and protocols.

    Also, as far as I know, it has not been confirmed that the alleged patient in this case ever shot gay sex scenes. The only thing I’ve heard alleged is that he shot solo scenes which were available on gay websites. Many, many male performers have shot solos.

  8. RickMadrid says:

    That’s it!! just stop using crossover male talent and upgrade the “TESTING” for sti’s. This won’t be happening all the time!

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