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wammt

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Everything posted by wammt

  1. I have seen couples where both are slutty, and have been together for a long time. However they seem to be far and few.
  2. Here you go: http://breeding.zone/threads/5191-How-to-clean-out-your-ass!
  3. Nice toy collection! And very nice albums; welcome bro.

  4. Before the baths were getting big, and in the smaller cities and towns that was the only way to get your cravings satisfied.
  5. I couln't care less about the orientation of the top. And for your information : there are lots and lots of guys that were in the same boat as you, and did act out their thoughts and fantasies.
  6. Hell yes, that has happened to me. Running around like a slut to different establishments and addresses for a day and night.
  7. This the one you are referring to ( Jan.2008)?: Swiss experts say individuals with undetectable viral load and no STI cannot transmit HIV during sex http://www.aidsmap.com/page/1429357/
  8. http://www.nytimes.com/2010/11/24/health/research/24aids.html?_r=1&ref=global-home Daily Pill Lowers H.I.V. Infection Risk, Study Finds By DONALD G. McNEIL Jr. Published: November 23, 2010 In a development that could change the battle against AIDS, researchers have found that taking a daily antiretroviral pill greatly lowers the chances of getting infected with the virus. In the study, published Tuesday by the New England Journal of Medicine, researchers found that the hundreds of gay men randomly assigned to take the drugs were 44 percent less likely to get infected than the equal number assigned to take a placebo. But when only the men whose blood tests showed they had taken their pill faithfully every day were considered, the pill was more than 90 percent effective, said Dr. Anthony S. Fauci, head of the division of the National Institutes of Health, which paid for the study along with the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation. “That’s huge,” Dr. Fauci said. “That says it all for me.” The large study, nicknamed iPrEx, included nearly 2,500 men in six countries and was coordinated by the Gladstone Institutes of the University of California, San Francisco. The results are the best news in the AIDS field in years, even better than this summer’s revelation that a vaginal microbicide protected 39 percent of all the women testing it and 54 percent of those who used it faithfully. Also, the antiretroviral pill — Truvada, a combination of two drugs, tenofovir and emtricitabine — is available by prescription in many countries right now, while the microbicide gel is made only in small amounts for clinical trials. The protection, known as “pre-exposure prophylaxis” or “PreP,” is also the first new form available to men, especially men who cannot use condoms because they sell sex, are in danger of prison rape, are under pressure from partners or lose their inhibitions when drunk or high. It is a form of protection “that does not involve getting permission from the other partner, and that’s important,” said Phill Wilson, president of the Black AIDS Institute, which focuses on the epidemic among blacks. Michel Sidibé, the head of UNAIDS, the United Nations AIDS-fighting agency, called it “a breakthrough that will accelerate the prevention revolution.” Because Truvada is available now, some clinicians already prescribe it for prophylaxis, Dr. Fauci said, but whether doing so becomes official policy will depend on discussions by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the Food and Drug Administration, medical societies and others, which could take months. Although the C.D.C. would prefer that doctors wait for further studies, more probably will prescribe it now that this study is out, said Dr. Kevin Fenton, chief of the agency’s AIDS division, so the C.D.C. will soon release suggested guidelines. The agency will encourage that the drug be prescribed only with close medical supervision and used only with other safe-sex practices, treatment for venereal diseases and counseling. “The results are encouraging, but it’s not time for gay men to throw away their condoms,” Dr. Fenton said. AIDS advocacy groups were very excited by the results. “If you comply with it, this works really well,” said Chris Collins, policy director of amfAR, the Foundation for AIDS Research. “This is too big to walk away from.” Mitchell Warren, executive director of AVAC, which lobbies for AIDS prevention, called the study “a great day for the fight against AIDS” and said gay men and others at risk needed to be consulted on the next steps. AIDS experts and the researchers issued several caveats about the study’s limitations. It was only of gay men and only of one drug combination. More studies, now under way, are needed to see if they duplicate these results and to see whether Truvada also protects heterosexual men and women, prostitutes and drug users who share needles, and whether other drugs will work, too. There is no medical reason to think the pill would not work in everyone, since it attacks the virus in the blood, rather than in the vaginal wall as a microbicide does. Different regimens, like taking the pills only when sex is anticipated instead of daily, also need testing. Also, many men in the study failed to take all their pills, and some clearly lied about it. For example, some who claimed to take them 90 percent of the time had little or no drug in their bloodstreams. Although the pills caused no major side effects in the study, some men disliked the relatively minor ones, like nausea and headaches. Also, as is common in clinical trials, some stopped bothering once they suspected they might be taking a placebo. “People have their own reasons,” Mr. Collins said. “People don’t take their Lipitor every day either.” A major question now is who will pay for the drug. In the United States, Truvada, made by Gilead Sciences, costs $12,000 to $14,000 a year. In very poor countries, generic versions costs as little as 40 cents a pill. Globally, only about 5 million of the 33 million people with AIDS are on antiretrovirals, and, in an era of tight foreign-aid budgets, that number is not expected to rise quickly. Hundreds of millions of Africans, eastern Europeans and Asians are at risk and could benefit from prophylaxis, but that would cost tens of billions of dollars. If he had the money, Mr. Sidibé of UNAIDS said, he would target high-risk groups like sex workers, gay men, drug users and uninfected people married to infected people. In this country, insurers and Medicare normally pay for the drugs, and the Ryan White Act covers the cost for the poor — but none of these payers yet have policies on supplying the drugs to healthy people. One fear some scientists have is that putting more people on the drugs will speed the evolution of drug-resistant strains. None of the 2,499 participants developed resistance to tenofovir. Three were found to have strains resistant to emtricitabine, but investigators believe all three were infected before the study began, but at levels low enough to have been missed by their first H.I.V. tests. Because participants were tested monthly and those who got infected were put on triple therapy cocktails, it was unlikely any were on two-drug Truvada long enough to develop drug resistant strains. Another fear was that the participants would become so fearless that they would stop using condoms, but the opposite effect was seen — they used condoms more often and had fewer sex partners. But that can also be a function of simply being enrolled in a study and getting a steady diet of safe sex advice and free condoms, the investigators said. The study took place at 11 sites in the United States, South Africa, Brazil, Thailand, Ecuador and Peru. Other trials of pre-exposure prophylaxis have about 20,000 volunteers enrolled around the world. Their results are expected to arrive in a steady stream over the next two years.
  9. In some pics.: yes. Oh, I have done piss up my ass (and mouth) many different ways. Definitely would be in for a group of pissing tops.

  10. http://www.nytimes.com/2010/11/21/world/europe/21pope.html?_r=1&ref=global-home Published: November 20, 2010 ROME — Pope Benedict XVI has said that condom use can be justified in some cases to help stop the spread of AIDS, the first Vatican exception to a long-held policy condemning condom use. The pope made the statement in a series of interviews with a German journalist, part of an extraordinary effort to address some of the harshest criticisms of his turbulent papacy. The pope made clear that he considered the use of condoms a last resort and not a way to prevent conception. The example he gave of when they could be used was in the case of male prostitutes. Amid his vigorous defense of the church in contemporary society, Benedict also acknowledged some of the church’s failings, like in the sexual abuse crisis, which he calls “a volcano of filth” sent by the devil. He pointed to a “readiness for aggression” among those who criticized him for revoking the excommunication of a bishop who denied the scope of the Holocaust. Benedict also discussed his contentious speech in Regensburg, Germany, in 2006, which provoked the ire of the Muslim world; denounced drug abuse, explained what he described as the impossibility of ordaining women as priests, and, with surprising candor, said that if he did not feel up to the task of being pope, he would resign. The revelations — which show the pope to be at once personal, provocative and largely unapologetic — come in the first book-length interview ever to be granted by a sitting pontiff, conducted in July by Peter Seewald, the author of two previous books of interviews with Benedict when he was still a cardinal. In allowing the pope to speak for himself, the book is a clear acknowledgment of the challenges facing Benedict, 83, whose five-year-old papacy has suffered a series of profound crises, including over the sexual abuse of minors by priests. Even his greatest defenders concede his papacy has had grave communications problems. The book “proves once again that Benedict XVI is his own best advocate,” said George Weigel, a papal biographer who wrote the introduction for the English-language edition of the book, “Light of the World,” which will be published on Tuesday. (The Vatican’s newspaper, L’Osservatore Romano, published excerpts online on Saturday afternoon.) In the book, Benedict upholds the view that the Roman Catholic Church does not see condoms as “a real or moral solution,” and says that they are “not really the way to deal with the evil of H.I.V. infection. That can really lie only in a humanization of sexuality.” But for the first time, he opened the door for at least some more open debate on the issue. “There may be a basis in the case of some individuals, as perhaps when a male prostitute uses a condom, where this can be a first step in the direction of a moralization, a first assumption of responsibility, on the way toward recovering an awareness that not everything is allowed and that one cannot do whatever one wants,” the pope said. Condoms have been a contentious issue ever since Pope Paul VI denounced birth control in his famous 1968 encyclical, “Humanae Vitae.” In recent years, bishops in Africa and elsewhere have been quietly calling on the Vatican to relax its stance to allow for condom use as part of a broader approach to fight the spread of H.I.V. and AIDS. The Rev. Joseph Fessio, a former student of Benedict and the editor in chief of Ignatius Press, which is publishing the English-language edition of the book, said the pope’s remarks on condoms were among the most surprising in the volume. “It’s very carefully qualified,” he said. “It would be wrong to say, ‘Pope Approves Condoms.’ He’s saying it’s immoral but in an individual case the use of a condom could be an awakening to someone that he’s got to be more conscious of his actions.” The book also devotes an entire chapter to the sexual abuse crisis which roared back this spring, likening it to a natural disaster that marred a year he had intended to celebrate priests. He says he was not surprised by the scandal, having spent 25 years as the prefect of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, the Vatican office that handles doctrinal and disciplinary questions, and which victims and critics have accused of not acting swiftly and decisively enough in tackling abuse or punishing abusive priests. In the book, Benedict says of the abuse crisis that erupted in the United States in 2001: “We responded to the matter in America immediately with revised, stricter norms. In addition, collaboration between the secular and ecclesiastical authorities was improved. Would it have been Rome’s duty, then, to say to all the countries expressly: Find out whether you are in the same situation? Maybe we should have done that.” And he acknowledged that the scandal had undermined the moral authority of the Catholic Church. “It is not only the abuse that is upsetting, it is also the way of dealing with it. The deeds themselves were hushed up and kept secret for decades. That is a declaration of bankruptcy for an institution that has love written on its banner
  11. Always commando, unless going to fetish fest.
  12. Best of luck with your test. Life doesn't stop with a poz test, it goes on. And everybody has different coping mechanisms. It also depends on where you live, and what you do for a living (i.e. insurance). Yes, you can take it raw with not too many worries afterwards(not quite true, as there are a few other things floating around....)
  13. Yes and No. As with guys it depends on the bottom. Some women really like it, others don't and just lay there. I am bi, and have been so since my teens. Also have been married three times. During all that time I continued to see (and fuck) other people; men, women and couples in various combinations. Right now I only see women that like some kinkiness (whatever that might be...), as straight vanilla sex is boring to me.
  14. Depends on the purpose, as was stated in the original post. For fucking ass I prefer cum or spit, as I noticed that I just don't come when using an artifical lube. No friction. For toys it depends on the material of the toy. If it is silicone (toy or enema nozzle) I will use a water based lube- most likely JOH2O. Otherwise I will use a silicone based lube- preferably Gun Oil. For fisting: whatever the top wants to use. J-lube is very good, but a pit of a pain in mixing and storing. Boybutter with some baking soda works great.
  15. Bathhouse at peak times, and dark rooms when available.
  16. @AlwaysOpen; thanks for the info., much appreciated.
  17. I've been barebacking my whole life; it is the way it is meant to be. But it sure helps with the turn-on factor if it is sleazy as well.
  18. I remember the place well; many fond memories. One of them where I was taking loads all night, as I had to stay busy until the bus to Richmond started running. When I got back there I noticed that I still had cum running out of my ass, plus my face and hair were still covered in cum (I had travelled on the bus like that)
  19. Definitely like your new album!

  20. They are all gone: The Barracks in Toronto, and Richard St. Service Club in Vancouver. There used to be a couple in Winnipeg that were wild as well. They both burned down. Had wild times in all of them.
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