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Markgraf’s World AIDS Day Rampage

2011 December 1

HELLO, INTERNET.  My name is Markgraf.  In recognition of World AIDS Day this year, I’ve been rampaging all over Cambridge city centre with FACTS, my talented friend Kirsten (who took the completely amazing photographs) and a whole load of mis-behaving paper!

COLD HARD FACTS ON IRRITATINGLY FLIMSY PAPER

ARE YOU READY FOR THE FACTS?  Of course you are.  Everyone should be ready for facts about HIV transmission and statistics, because it’s ignorance that fuels prejudice, and prejudice that shits on people’s lives.
A photograph of a young man holding a placard in a busy town centre. The crowd is blurred out, and the figure of the young man sharp and colourful in contrast. The placard reads, 'FACT: More people than ever are living with HIV in the UK, but prejudice makes keeps them silent and makes their lives extremely difficult'

Fun fact: there’s effective treatments for both HIV and hideous misinformation and ignorance!

A photograph of a young man posing with a placard against a building. The placard reads, 'FACT: you cannot get HIV from a kiss, or by sharing a cup or a plate or a hug.'

…So hug away! :D

A photograph of a young man crouching on a fountain, holding a placard. The placard reads, 'MYTH: Only gay men can get HIV. In 2010, the majority of new HIV diagnoses were acquired heterosexually.'

Can we stop assuming things about people’s lifestyles, now?  Please?

A photograph of a young man holding a placard above his head while standing on the wall in front of King's College, Cambridge. The placard reads, 'MYTH: Lots of people come to the UK for free HIV treatment. No they don't! Most migrants with HIV don't even know it.'

HIV can be spread regardless of anyone’s background or immigration status.  And you can’t seek out treatment for free for a virus you don’t know you have.  Get yourself screened regularly.

A photograph of a young man looking perplexed while holding a placard in a busy market. The placard reads, 'MYTH: You can get HIV from a fish pedicure. What? No! This has never happened and there is no evidence that it ever could.'

I mean, the fish don’t even get anywhere near your bloodstream. And if they do, YOU HAVE BIGGER PROBLEMS THAN HIV TRANSMISSION TO WORRY ABOUT AS YOU ARE PRESUMABLY RECEIVING A SHARK PEDICURE.1

AND THAT’S A WRAP, FOLKS.  Pop over to HIVAware for more.

A photograph of a young man looking determined while holding a placard and stepping dramatically into a red old fashioned phonebox. The placard reads, "FACT: More people than ever are living with HIV in the UK, but prejudice makes keeps them silent and makes their lives extremely difficult."

Spread facts, not fear.  Wear a ribbon.  Get screened.

  1. Ed’s note: For those made curious by the fish pedicure placard, this is a misconception that’s currently so widespread, it has its OWN SECTION on the HIVAware Mythbusting FAQ. Yeah. []
13 Responses leave one →
  1. Russell permalink
    December 1, 2011

    Super plus amazing post, the photos are a great way of communicating information.

    Only problem is, I’ve met the person in them and his name isn’t Markgraf, it’s – what? You! No!

    • Miranda permalink*
      December 1, 2011

      HE IS AN INTERNATIONAL MAN OF MYSTERY OKAY

      HE GOES BY MANY NAMES

  2. Jenni permalink
    December 1, 2011

    This is the BEST THING.

  3. December 1, 2011

    I used to work for an organisation that did training for service providers in HIV awareness and people used to ask them terrible prejudiced things. One of the common questions was “What if they bite us?” as if people living with HIV are a bit rabid. This was in the last five years too.

    • Miranda permalink*
      December 1, 2011

      Ugh, God, I know. I am so weary of that question (I work in a similar environment).

      I’m basically sick of the “deliberate infector” as one of the dominant stereotypes that surfaces in pop culture when HIV comes up from time to time. It’s this whole lazy, shitty bogeyman stereotype thing – the media often focus on cases where people are accused of it way more than any other HIV issues, of course – and it really sucks.

      • Russell permalink
        December 1, 2011

        Hmm, interesting corrolary here, in that whilst I’m sure the stereotyping is true, and it is patently offensive, it’s also the case that (in this country) deliberately or knowingly infecting someone with HIV is not a crime. Personally, I’m of the opinion that this is disgraceful. If you know you have an STD and sleep with someone anyway, without telling them, thereby increasing their risk of infection… well, it’s definitely some sort of crime to my mind.

        • Miranda permalink*
          December 2, 2011

          Okay, there are a number of points that this raises, which I’ll come back to when I can (it’s very late as I’m writing this and I’ve got to sleep), but, briefly:

          An estimated 25% of infected people do not know they have it in the UK. At what point they became aware can be difficult to prove when you factor in the issue of how long it can take a person to get tested or come to terms with a diagnosis. (And stigma plays a fundamental role in many people’s probability to engage in risk taking behaviour, non engagement with treatment, denial, and so on. Coming out as positive can be a potentially life threatening deal for many people so we need to sort this out rather than going “these people are entirely lacking in moral fibre” out of hand). It may not, with a long term regular partner, be easy to pinpoint when they knew, and when both partners knew, against when sexual activity has happened. In law there is “intentional” and “reckless” and “accidental” infection. To prove intentional is very hard. It is very complicated and convictions are consequently rare.

          What I am really trying to say, though, is that this shit is really rare and extremely difficult to describe reliably. However, in the absence of reliable evidence to go on, it is a thoroughly dominant narrative used to demonise and criminalise people, and particularly to stigmatise HIV (it is a trope so strong that several sex ed campaigns have used it to try to highlight risks around unprotected sex, which has conversely only made life more difficult for people facing stigma, and hence made some people less likely to test – see also: the scorpion ads, the 2009 ‘HIV is a murderer’ Hitler ads, etc).

          I don’t want to be overly simplistic and compare other issues and groups of people too freely but think of how irritating it is when you have to have the “BUT SOME WOMEN DO MAKE UP RAPE CLAIMS TO SPITE MEN!” conversation, or the “trans* women: OUT TO TRICK CIS DUDES!” conversation. I am so sick of this being seen as hugely common when, you know, in terms of documented cases, it’s not. I don’t think there are many brought to court, either – again, HIV’s spread owes more to education and stigma issues than to maliciousness. For me it’s not about “BUT IT *COULD* HAPPEN!” so much as “but why is this the first story we clamour to tell, the first thing we raise? And why do we behave as though our own stigmatising acts have no bearing on the context in which reckless infection might occur?” The answer, I think, lies in the lack of decent detailed HIV education – beyond simple “stay safe” edicts – in classrooms and more generally.

          For more on HIV and the law, this is useful: http://www.avert.org/criminal-transmission.htm

          This timeline has a grand total of two cases cited: http://www.hivaware.org.uk/be-aware/timeline-of-hiv.php

          I’d also recommend reading about the Swiss Study and ‘treatment as prevention’ as they also raise ideas that complicate a simple “has infection, infects another person, CRIME” linear view.

          I think it’s important to hold into the idea in discussions like this that many people affected by what we are discussing are not ‘over there’ somewhere in the ether – rather they may be reading along or participating…

          OKAY I GUESS THAT WAS NOT BRIEF

          I AM NOT VERY GOOD AT BRIEF AM I :D

  4. December 1, 2011

    Oh, those are absolutely gorgeous photos. *links everywhere*

  5. kaberett permalink
    December 1, 2011

    fantastic. <3

  6. me_and permalink
    December 1, 2011

    This is so many kinds of awesome.

  7. Becky Shepherd permalink
    December 1, 2011

    Brilliance.

  8. December 1, 2011

    Love the last photo! And, uh, Markgraf is totally hot in these pics. *ahem*

  9. Jon Ward permalink
    December 2, 2011

    Go you!

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