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General

this is exactly what I hate

(This is refering to the idea that AIDS patients should be put in specific hospitals )

Q. Don't you think it's cruel to suggest placing HIV patients in national hospitals?

A. No. It is the only proven way to reduce and virtually halt the spread of AIDS. Those who condemn such avenues of prevention are ignoring the extremely active sex life of homosexuals and lesbians who usually have dozens if not hundreds of different partners a year. They also don't wish to bring attention to the fact that heterosexual whites aren't getting HIV at near the rate of non-whites and homosexuals. It seems that white heterosexuals are almost unaffected. Homosexuals don't want normal people to be aware they have HIV or AIDS because they know how disgusted most people are of their filthy habits. If they really were concerned about humanity as they claim, they would shut up about their "anonymity" get tested and check themselves in to a hospital reserved for HIV positive patients http://www.kukluxklan.org/

This is from my Civics book

"Fighting Age Discrimination in New York City"

"Before December 1993 many busniesses in New York City, including retail stores, museums, hospitals, restaurants, and even movie theaters, barred acess to teenagers or young children. Busniess owners calimed that these young people were mainly responsible for the shoplifting, property destruction, and disruptive behavior that hurt their establishments. In response, they simply barred teenagers from entering.

Complaints by young people and thier parents led the city's Commission on Human Rights to issue new regulations that prohibit age discrimination. Although the new regulations still allow some restrictions, such as limiting acess to bars or rated R movies, they prohibit any sweeping exclusion of young people from public places. As a result the young people of New York now enjoy full enefits of as citizens of thier community."

that came from the book Civics Responsibilities and citizenship by David C. Saffell Copyright 2000 by the McGraw-Hill Companies