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California passes HIV Rights Law


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2017 Oct 7, 7:31pm   3,502 views  21 comments

by MisdemeanorRebel   ➕follow (12)   💰tip   ignore  

... making knowingly transmitting to a partner HIV/AIDS without any warning or disclosure a misdemeanor from a felony.

Because if you're charged with a felony to deliberately spread incurable disease without fear of punishment, then what freedom do you really have?

I hope they give drug-resistant TB sufferers the right to visit schools and convenience stores and breathe on the Slurpee Machine. After all, why discriminate against one disease but not another?

Comments 1 - 21 of 21        Search these comments

1   Ceffer   2017 Oct 7, 7:35pm  

It's about time they had a Buttfucking Bill of Rights!
2   Shaman   2017 Oct 7, 9:07pm  

I hear the first sign of AIDS is a severe pounding in your ass...
3   MAGA   2017 Oct 7, 9:44pm  

Just don't bend over near a Realtor and you should be OK.


7   Ceffer   2017 Oct 9, 1:56pm  

Sounds about right. It's now the same penalty for parking in a loading zone, just parking dick in a loading zone.
8   curious2   2017 Oct 9, 2:00pm  

@zzyzzx, where do you find these lies about California, and why do you spread them? The law changed from felony to misdemeanor, but your other assertions are false.
9   socal2   2017 Oct 9, 2:04pm  

curious2 says
The law changed from felony to misdemeanor, but your other comments are simply false.


As if that isn't bad enough?

KNOWINGLY infecting a person with a deadly disease is only a misdemeanor?
10   curious2   2017 Oct 9, 2:15pm  

socal2 says
KNOWINGLY infecting a person with a deadly disease is only a misdemeanor?


@socal2 @TwoScoopsMcGee, the change from felony to misdemeanor prosecutes potentially deadly disease transmission the same, whether HIV or TB. You could argue they should both be felonies, as one legislator did contend. Frankly, the part of the story that surprised me was that intentional transmission of serious diseases had been only a misdemeanor. The debate seemed to center around whether people would get tested or choose not to know (in order to avoid felony prosecution). If you want them all to be felonies, that's a consistent position, and you should write your legislator.
11   socal2   2017 Oct 9, 2:33pm  

curious2 says
If you want them all to be felonies, that's a consistent position, and you should write your legislator.


Apparently some California Legislators took time from bankrupting our State to lower the bar for trying to kill someone. Shouldn't they have raised the bar on other diseases to be consistent?

People lives are at stake - and regardless if someone endangers a person's life through negligence or malice, it should be a more serious crime than a speeding ticket,
12   curious2   2017 Oct 9, 2:35pm  

socal2 says
bankrupting


State prisons have already more felons than capacity. You should ask your legislators to end the drug war, in order to make resources available for other priorities.
13   MisdemeanorRebel   2017 Oct 9, 2:47pm  

curious2 says

@socal2 @TwoScoopsMcGee, the change from felony to misdemeanor prosecutes potentially deadly disease transmission the same, whether HIV or TB.


I appreciate this curious2, if so then spreading TB knowingly and willingly should also be a felony.

I would say that TB has detectable symptoms ("Steve, you're really coughing a lot") whereas HIV generally does not have obvious symptoms in many people, at least early on.

What the State should have done is add communicable chronic diseases to the list of felonies, rather than remove HIV,.
14   socal2   2017 Oct 9, 3:06pm  

curious2 says
State prisons have already more felons than capacity. You should ask your legislators to end the drug war, in order to make resources available for other priorities.


Yes - if only California would cooperate with ICE and deport illegal alien criminals instead of wasting hundreds of millions on them in our criminal justice system.

Oh wait!
15   RC2006   2017 Oct 9, 3:13pm  

TwoScoopsMcGee says
What the State should have done is add communicable chronic diseases to the list of felonies, rather than remove HIV,.


This.

Intentionally infecting someone with a disease should be a felony. Yes a person with HIV can take a pill for the rest of their life, but what if for some reason they loose access or something else happens to them such a mental illness that impacts them taking a pill later on down the road. Once you have HIV you life is forever changed with relationships, reproduction, side effects, and giving it to yet more people. Just because you don’t rapidly deteriorate like before changes nothing.
When this disease first appeared we should have treated them like lepers.
16   FortWayne   2017 Oct 9, 4:41pm  

Homos and prostitutes got their wishes granted.

Ca no longer represents normal people, taken over by liberal loonies.
18   Y   2017 Oct 24, 8:40pm  

This is a strategy to maximize infection of the homo community, thereby causing their numbers to dwindle.
Thanks governor jerry!
19   NDrLoR   2017 Oct 24, 8:58pm  

rpanic01 says
Yes a person with HIV can take a pill for the rest of their life
What a heart-warming consolation!
20   FortWayne   2017 Oct 24, 9:00pm  

BlueSardine says
This is a strategy to maximize infection of the homo community, thereby causing their numbers to dwindle.
Thanks governor jerry!


Jerry is bending over backwards for the pervert community. Passed some law about educating kids about this crap, now transgender rights shit, followed by freedom to infect people. Fuck, next will be the right to murder people on the street is ok.
21   lostand confused   2017 Oct 24, 9:32pm  

I don't get this. if you knowingly infect someone with a disease with no cure-CA oh well.

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