Gay Activists Want to Contaminate Blood Supply

 

July 7, 2016

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Real Women of Canada 

The Canadian Blood Services has the responsibility of protecting the public. It is not acceptable that homosexual activists endanger public safety by demanding that blood taken from sexually active gays be used in transfusions.

The Canadian Blood Services has declined to do so for the all too obvious reason that homosexual sexual acts are particularly risky.

illegal.pngFor example, in Canada, homosexuals comprise 64% of all HIV cases while comprising 2% of the population.

The next most HIV prevalent male category is intravenous drug users, but they consist of only 12% of HIV carriers. Even though homosexuals make up a tiny minority of the Canadian population, they still represent 50% of all new HIV cases–i.e., they are identified as one of the most likely groups to have HIV.

The Canadian Blood Services is a not-for-profit charity funded by the provinces, but at arms’ length from them. It replaced the Canadian Red Cross in blood collection work in 1998. Under the Red Cross, tainted blood donations caused 800 deaths in the 1980’s. There are also 400 tainted blood recipients still living with HIV, and as many as 20,000 living with Hepatitis C.

As a result of this tragedy, the Canadian Blood Services had insisted that no blood can be accepted if a donor has had sex with a man during his lifetime.

Under political pressure from homosexual activists, however, the ban was relaxed in 2013 to permit blood from homosexuals who have not had sex with a man for a five year period. 

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But what about the right of the public to be protected re. the public’s blood transfusion system? Surely, the public has rights too.

Concern about homosexuals donating blood is not just peculiar to Canada. Many of the most gay-friendly countries, including Norway, Switzerland, the Netherlands, Denmark and Belgium maintain a lifetime ban on blood donations from “men who have sex with men”.

To be sure, the Canadian Blood Services carefully tests for HIV and every other blood-borne disease. But the HIV has a brief early period when it doesn’t show up in the tests. The consequences of a false negative are so devastating that the Canadian Blood Services didn’t take chances and does “category screening” as well. It also excludes blood donations from prostitutes, johns and intravenous drug users. 

Maybe these bloods should be labeled clearly from what type of donors they came from and should be given to the same group of people!

Source Article from http://henrymakow.com/2016/07/blood-donations-where-discrimination.html

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