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Comment:
The
mental and physical sicknesses wrought upon women who have chosen to
abdicate their womanhood and practice lesbianism is a deep rooted
secret which the medical profession doesn't want the public to know.
The
basic premise for posting the here-in-after medical compilation is
to warn the public on pervasive anomalies afflicting a high
percentage of medical practitioners within the medical system.
When
mentioning lesbians to the average woman, the first image
conjured is a few butches working in a warehouse, or a construction
crew or playing on an all butch baseball team. This
perception is a dangerous notion because a high percentage have
proliferated the medical profession, law, psychology and psychiatry.
Therefore,
I forewarn the heterosexual woman in particular, to study well the
compiled mental and physical diseases afflicting all lesbians. Then
I urge all to give serious thought as to whether this is the type of
doctor you want in a life or death situation. Another factor
usually too shameful for the average woman to discuss. Would
you feel comfortable knowing that a lesbian physician is examining
your body and all the while fantasizing a sex orgy with your body.
Or, even worse, would you feel comfortable allowing a lesbian
physician to examine the privates of your children.
This scenario reminds me of the time I was driving a
woman to her doctors appointment, which the doctor happen to be a
womyn. When I explained to her the probable equations for
lesbian doctors, she made me turn around and take her home to make
another appointment with a man doctor. My straw -poll survey shows
real women, for good reasons, prefer not to be attended by a womyn
physician.
The
people must be informed and must take action before it's too late.
Through affirmative action programs the medical profession has
become proliferated with lesbian physicians and in most cases
disallowing a choice for a man doctor.
I
urge heterosexual women to reject this practice. As the old saw-song
goes, "things have to get worser before they get better,"
well, the conspiracy can not get any lower, so now is the time to
flush this medical rogue from under the table and place it on top
for examination.
If a womyn doctor is forced upon you, don't
be ashamed; ask questions; get a biography on her; find out if she
has ever been a political activist. There are other revealing
factors, but the average woman doesn't have the experience to
recognize lesbian traits, so, for clues: boys haircut, close
cropped pearl earrings sometimes only one, boys collared shirts
sometimes with boys tie, masculine sleeveless vest, boys suit coat,
mens construction shoes, ghostly drab facial expression and color
because of no makeup. The lesbian code prohibits any
enhances which may attract a heterosexual man.
By
the way, if you find some means of recognition too difficult, the
sure giveaway is to check if the doctor ever took a "womyn
study course," and if so, then you better scat as fast and far
as can. Or, if all else fails, ask her if she would mind
taking a lie-detector test. Never the less, above and beyond all
else, never, ever, be shamed, intimidated, or threatened from
asking for a biography check. Or, better yet, to avoid all the
hassle, just demand a man doctor. That's what I do.
Now
flip down and read the embodiment of lesbian handicaps. Then
ask, is this the type of doctor I want treating me?
Steve Lashuk
LESBIANISM-A PATHETIC LIFE STYLE
Permission to post this compilation granted
by source listed at end.
Until
recently, there was not as many facts and information about the
lesbian lifestyle. However, with lesbians coming to the
forefront of the "gay" movement ( because unfortunately,
the male homosexual, which by all studies is twice the population of
lesbians, has been devastated and lost many of its leaders to
AIDS ), their beliefs and behaviors are now center stage. Lets
take a closer look at the inherit problems of lesbianism.
"
In order to raise children with equality, we must take them away
from families and communally raise them,"
Source:
Dr. Mary Jo Bane, Feminist and Assistance Professor of
Education, Wellesley College.
"
[I am] tired of the old chestnut that our movement for public
acceptance has not increased and will not increase the number of gay
men and lesbians in existence. ' There are more of us than there
used to be...'phobes' like Pat Robertson are right when they say
that we threaten the family, male domination and the Calvinist ethic
of work... that has paralyzed most Americans' search for
pleasure.'"
Source:
Donna Minkowitz, " Recruit, Recruit, Recruit," The
Advocate, December 29, 1992.
Only
20% of lesbians had relationships that involved cohabitation for
more than 3 years. Also, this study found that only 23% of lesbians
reported positive relationships with their mothers as compared with
85% of heterosexual women and 70% of lesbians were
"tomboys" as children.
Source:
M. T. Saghir and E. Robins, "
Male and female Homosexuality;
A Comprehensive Investigation," ( Baltimore: Williams
Wilkins, 1973), p.57, table 4:14.p. 226, table 12.11.
Exclusively
heterosexual women can, in mid-life, develop lesbian feelings and
behavior.
This is a well known clinical feature of lesbianism. It often
occurs during marriage or after marriage break-up, with no
clinically observable hint of prior existence - not even lesbian
fantasies. The study also went on to report that most lesbian
relationships last less than 3 years. Affairs of 5 years or more are
exceptional.
Source:
West, D.J., Homosexuality
Reexamined
(Duckworth, London, 1977).
78%
of lesbians value highly "Dildos" and regularly engage in
stimulation inside the vagina by manual or oral means.
Source:
K. Jay and A. Young, The
Gay Report, ( New York, Summit 1979 ), p. 544, 388, 414.
"
We finally realize that recruitment is the only answer...lesbian
goals must be to recruit more lesbians."
Source:
Lesbian activist Kathy McDevitt, in an appearance before the
Davis City, California City Council in 1980. Davis
Enterprise, October 2, 1980.
"
Being a housewife is an illegitimate profession...the choice to
serve and be protected and plan towards being a family-maker is a
choice that should not be. The heart of radical feminism is to
change that."
Source:
Vivian Gornick, feminist author, University of Illinois, The
Daily Illini, April 25, 1981.
A
study drew a link between sexual abuse and later lesbianism, but
also said that most lesbians learned to masturbate by being
masturbated by a female. It appears that these women as
growing girls had retreated from distressing male sexual contact at
the same time as they experienced female sexual contact.
Source:
Van Wyk,P.H., Geist, C.S., " Psychosocial development of
heterosexual, bisexual, and homosexual behavior," Archives
of Sexual Behavior
(1984); vol.13, pp. 505-544.
A
survey of 50 women who became bisexual after the age of 30 found
that they were exclusively heterosexual before, having had no
earlier significant sexual fantasy about females, and quite
heterosexually satisfied.
They continued to enjoy promiscuous sexual relationships with
both sexes.
Source: Dixon, J.K., " Sexuality and relationship
changes in married
females following the commencement of bisexual
activity," Journal of
Homosexuality (1985); Vol. 11, pp. 115-133.
Lesbians
are 19 times more likely than heterosexual women to have syphilis,
twice as likely to suffer from genital warts and 4 times as likely
to ave scabies.
Source:
P. Cameron, K. Proctor, and W. Coburn, " Sexual
Orientation and Sexually transmitted Disease," Nebraska
Medical Journal, Vol. 70 No. 8, August 1985, pp. 292-299.
In
still another study, lesbianism seemed to be associated with poor
vaginal function, in which the girls doubted their femininity.
Source:
Mulaikal, R.M., Migoen, C.J., Rock, J.A., " Fertility
rates in female patients with congenital adrenal hyperplasia due to
21-hydroxylase deficiency,"
The New England
Journal of Medicine (1987), Vol. 316; pp. 178-182.
A
1970 Kinsey Institute survey of females shows that about 45% of
lesbians have been married.
Source: Klassen, A.D., Williams, C.J., Levitt,
E.E., Sex and Morality in the
U.S. (Connecticut: Wesleyan University Press, 1989).
"
While incest is generally viewed as dysfunctional for the family -
and this is true of heterosexual incest - I will argue that at
origin, homosexual incest plays a functional role in the development
of the family."
Source:
Lesbian activist and first female president of the Gay and
Lesbian Press Association (GLPA), Susan Cavin, Lesbian
Origins, p. 57, 1989.
An anti-male attitude is common among lesbians. Lesbian Geri Cox
said this about men " The older I get...the angrier I get.
Especially with men. I've gotten to the point where I hate
men."
Source:
Martha Barron Barrett, Invisible
Lives ( NY: William Morrow Co,, 1989 ), p. 248.
In 1990, V.E. Coleman surveyed 90 lesbian couples and found
that 46% experienced repeated acts of violence in their
relationships.
Another study of lesbians found a "relatively high prevalence
of the viral STDs, herpes simplex and human papillomavirus (HPV).
Source: A. Edwards and R.N. Thin, "Sexually
transmitted diseases in lesbians," Internal Journal
of STD/AIDS, May 1990, from the abstact, p. 178.
" 'Any women can be a lesbian,' says the song,' Feminism is the
theory, lesbianism is the practice,' goes the slogan. And to many
women, the 'women's community' is a lesbian community."
Source:
Beth Elliot, "
Bisexuality, the best thing that ever happened to
lesbian-feminism?," in Bi
Any Other Name: Bisexual
People Speak Out. Loraine Hutchins and Kaahumanu (eds.), p. 324,
1991.
Lesbian
activist and author Lillian Faderman wrote: " because a general
disenchantment with and suspicion of all males was central to
lesbian - feminist doctrine, the gay man was naturally seen as being
no less an enemy than any other human with a penis, and
lesbian-feminists could make no lasting coalition with gay men in a
gay revolution."
Source:
Lillian Faderman, Odd
Girls and Twilight Lovers ( NY: Columbia University Press, 1991
), p. 212.
A 1985 study of 1109 lesbians by Gwai-Yong Lie and Sabrina
Gentlewarrier reported that slightly more than half of the
respondents indicated that they had been abused by a female partner.
Source: Gwat-Yong Lie & Gentlewarrier,
"Intimate violence in lesbian relationships: Discussion of
survey findings and practice implications," (1991) 15 Journal
of Social Service Research 46, The Haworth Press.
A lesbian is 3 times more likely to get breast cancer than a
heterosexual woman.
Source:
Associated Press,
" One in Three Lesbians Face Breast Cancer,"
Desert Sun, 5
February 1993, p. 1.
A national study of 1,924 female homosexuals conducted in 1984 found
that 83% regularly used alcohol (25% more than once a week and 6%
every day), 47% smoked marijuana, and 30% regularly smoked tobacco.
Source:
C. Ryan and J. Bradford, " The National Lesbian Health
Care Survey: An Overview," in Psychological
Perspectives on Lesbian and Gay Male Experiences,
ed. L. D. Garnets and D. C. Kimmel ( New York: Columbia University
Press, 1993 ), p.551.
Ex-Gay groups report high levels of male sexual abuse (up to 85%) in
lesbians who come to them for help.
Source:
Davies, B., Rentzel, L., Coming
Out of Homosexuality
( Downers Grove, Il: InterVarsity Press, 1993).
In a obituary study released in 1994, 140 lesbians in the sample
died at a median age of 45. 23% of the lesbians lived past the
age of 64, as opposed to 83% of women in the general population.
Overall, 20% of lesbians died a violent death - 512 times the rate
of white females aged 25-44. Also 7.1% of lesbians died
of AIDS - 41,00 times more than heterosexual females 24-44.
Source:
Paul Cameron, Phd., " The
Gay Nineties," ( Franklin, Tennessee, Adroit Press 1993 ),
pp. 54-56.
Dr. Suzanne Haynes of the National Cancer institute estimated that
lesbians have a 33% lifetime risk of developing breast cancer, that
is 3 to 4 times higher than the average female population.
Source:
Jancin, B. ( 1994, February 15
), " Lesbians nay be at higher risk for breast cancer," OB/GYN
News, p. 4.
Another study of 113 lesbians reported that 41% said they had been
abused in one or more relationships. Source:
Ristock, J., "And Justice for All?...The Social Context of
Legal Responses to Abuse in Lesbian relationships," (1994) 7 Canadian
Journal of Women and the Law 420.
The National Lesbian Health Care Survey revealed that lesbian women
reported that over 50% of the nearly 2,000 lesbians surveyed had
considered suicide and 18% had attempted it.
Source:
Bradford, J., Ryan, C, & Rothblum ED, (1994), "
National Lesbian Health Care Survey: Implications for mental health
care," Journal of
Consulting and Clinical Psychology, 62 (2), pp. 228-242.
In one study, 15% of lesbians engaged in torture for sexual fun
(sadomasochism) that included "piercing, cutting or whipping to
the point of bleeding" with their lovers. Source:
Lemp et al, "HIV seroprevalence and risk behavior among
lesbians," American Journal of Public Health,
1995; vol. 85: pp1549-1552.
One
study of lesbians and STDs found the prevalence of herpes simplex
type-2 was 13%.
Source:
Marrazzo Jm, Stine K, Handsfield HH, Koutsky LA, "
Epidemiology of STD and cervical neoplasia among lesbian and
bisexual women."
Abstracts of the
National Lesbian and Gay Health Association conference, Seattle,
WA, July, 1996.
Another study found bacterial vaginosis occurring in 33% of lesbians
but only 13% of heterosexual women, and found that: "Cervical
cytology abnormalities were uncommon but only found in the lesbians
( those abnormalities may be precursors to cervical cancers). Source:
C.J. Skinner and others, "A case-controlled study of sexual
health needs of lesbians," Genitourin Medical, August
1996, from the abstract, p. 227.
Studies show that some lesbians and bisexual women have high rates
of risky behaviors, such as drug use and exchanging sex for drugs or
money. Bisexual women reported higher rates of HIV infection
than either exclusively homosexual or exclusively heterosexual
women. These HIV-infected bisexual women also had high rates of
injection drug use. Source:
Eng, TR, & Butler, WT (eds.), 1997, The
Hidden Epidemic: Confronting Sexually Transmitted Diseases,
Washington, DC, National Academy Press.
Sharing
sex toys/devices, engaging in oral-genital or oral-anal contact and
being exposed to menstrual or body fluid are high risk behaviors for
transmitting pathogens between lesbians. Source:
Rankow,
EJ, (1997), Primary medical care of the gay and lesbian patient, North
Carolina Medical Journal, 58 (2), pp. 92-96.
In 1997, lesbian editorialist and activist Lillian Faderman
profiled 5 lesbian leaders who had recently abandoned homosexuality
when they fell in love with a man.
Such
discrimination from the outside, along with the destructive force of
the AIDS epidemic, has tended to obscure the internal problem that
plagues the gay community: domestic violence. In fact,
several recent studies suggest that same-sex domestic violence may
be occurring at a similar rate - approximately one-third of all
relationships - as heterosexual domestic violence. A six-city
survey conducted by gay activists last year turned up 1,566 reported
incidents of gay domestic violence, several hundred more than
reported incidents of anti-gay harassment and violence. People
are really surprised, especially around lesbian battering. The
notion among feminists, lesbians - among women in general - is that
this ia a male problem. It's part of an older lesbian-feminist
paradigm which says most of the problems in the world come from men
and if we could isolate ourselves from them, then things would be
kind of idyllic. It's not true. But people in lesbian
communities don't want to talk about that publicly. It's
like airing dirty laundry. Source: Ros Davidson,
" Gay-on-Gay Violence: The gay community's dirty secret -
domestic violence - is finally coming out of the closet,"
Salon Magazine, February 27, 1997.
On April 18, 1997 at a " Youth Pride Day " event at Dupont
Circle in Washington D.C., the Lesbian Avengers handed out
a brochure to teenage children called "Oral Sex with a
Women" written by the Whitman-Walker Clinic Inc. for lesbian
sex.
The material includes instructions pertaining to homosexual
sex activities like "rimming" (insert the tongue into the
anus) with lesbians and promotes drug use for enhance sexual
pleasure.
Another study of 1,086 lesbian and bisexual women found 21% of
lesbians reported having high-risk sexual contact, including sex
with homosexual men, and 49% of bisexual women interviewed reported
having high-risk sexual contact.
In addition, 9% of lesbian/bisexual women reported a history
of intravenous drug abuse.
Source:
" Lesbian, Gay and Bisexual Have Unique HIV-Prevention
Needs," SEICUS Shop Talk
Bulletin, August 1, 1997.
A National Gay and Lesbian Newsmagazine, The Advocate, had
a cover article highlighting that " 104,000 lesbians are living
with it (breast cancer). This year another 7,028 will get it."
Source:
The Advocate,
" Breast Cancer," ( 1997, September, 30 ).
"I have always been open with my daughter about my
lesbianism...I am proud to be the lesbian mother of a lesbian
daughter! ...at age 12 she developed a crush towards one of my
friends...As teens, some lesbians had their own loving sexual
encounters with adult women...To me the ones being controlling and
manipulative are those who tell the teens they must not have sex
with adult women. Now that is control! "
Source:
Monica, Oklahoma City, OK, Lesbian
Connection, November-December 1997.
An another study by a homosexual "gay gene" scientist, Dr.
Dean Hamer, researched women and found that sisters of lesbians had
about a 6% chance of being a lesbian, but that daughters
of lesbians had a 33% chance of being a lesbian. This
"whopping" jump in the percentage of lesbians among
daughters of lesbian mothers, said Hamer, " could only mean one
thing. being a lesbian...
was 'culturally transmitted,
not inherited." Source:
The Washington Blade
(gay paper), January 30, 1998.
In February of 1998, right before Valentine's Day, gay activists
across the state of California celebrated "Freedom to Marry
Day." In Sacramento, the state's capitol, lesbian activist and
the Speaker Pro Tempore for the California General Assembly, Sheila
James Kuehl (D-Santa Monica) characterized anyone who opposes
same-sex marriage as being "hysterical."
Source:
"National Freedom to Marry Day," News Conference,
hosted by LIFE: California's Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender
and HIV/AIDS Lobby, Sacramento, CA., February 12, 1998.
In one study in 1998, it was found that 30% of the recruited sample
of lesbians had evidence of genital Human Papilloma Virus (HPV)
infection, including 19% of exclusively lesbians. Certain strains of
HPV are known to be cervical cancer-causing agents. 90% of all
cervical cancer is caused by genital HPV infection.
Source:
Marrazzo,JM, Koutsky, LA, Stine, KL, Kuypers, JM, Grubert,
TA, Galloway, DA, Kiviat, NB, & Handsfield, HH, (1998), "
Genital HPV Infection in Women who have Sex with Women," Journal
Of Infectious Diseases 178 (6), pp. 1604-1609.
"Many lesbians don't get tested for HIV because lesbians as a
group are perceived to be at low risk. This reliance on
categories rather than the real world of risky behaviors has created
denial, say advocates. Many small-scale studies show that
lesbians or bisexual women who use IV drugs or have sex with gay or
bisexual men are at a particularly high risk for HIV.
There are also women who don't identify as lesbian but have sex with
other women and women who use donor insemination. A recent
study by Emory University researches shows that HIV-positive women
have actively reproducing HIV in their vaginal secretions that may
be different HIV strains from those circulating in their blood. The
data underscores the risk of HIV to lesbians and bisexual women.
Other studies suggest that lesbians are at risk for STDs that may
increase the risk of HIV transmission." Source:
HIV Plus, " Lesbians Take Note," September 1998,
vol.1: p. 23.
A report by the National Coalition of Anti-Violence Programs
indicates that of 3,327 domestic violence cases self-reported among
homosexuals in 12 U.S. cities in 1997, about half involved lesbian,
bisexual and transgender women. " The fact is, gay men and
lesbians are more likely to be injured by an intimate partner than a
stranger," said Susan Holt, program coordinator for domestic
violence services at the L.A. Gay and Lesbian Center.
Holt said that studies suggest that between 25% to 33% of all gay
male and lesbian relationships involve abuse.
Source:
Rhonda Smith, " Lesbians affected by domestic violence,
reports says," The Washington
Blade, 16 October 1998.
At a private girl's school in Baltimore, Maryland, the headmistress
said the following at a all day teachers conference. " On
health issues, we want a student to talk to a lesbian... Lesbian
issues are integrated into our morals class.
Source:
Ms. Jeane Brune, Headmistress of Roland Park County School
for Girls, AIMS 1998 Fall
Conference, November 9, 1998.
Another study of lesbians reveals that: "Genital HPV infection
and squamous intraepithelial lesions are common among women who are
sexually active with women." Source:
J.M. Marrazzo and others, "Genital human papillomavirus
infection in women who have sex with women," Journal
of Infectious Diseases, December 1998, from the abstract, p.
1604.
Most lesbians have prior, periodic or current heterosexual contact.
STD rates for active bisexual women are often twice that of those
who engage in exclusively lesbian activity.
Source:
Doll, LS, & Ostrow, DG, (1999), Homosexual and bisexual
behavior, In KK Holmes, PA Mardh, PF Sparling, SM Lemon, WE Stamm, P
Piot, & JN Wasserhelt (Eds), Sexually Transmitted Diseases
(3rd ed.), pp. 151-162.
While exclusively being a lesbian has little threat of getting AIDS,
lesbians have their own set of problems. Domestic violence among
lesbian partners is so high that workshops on the subject are
popping up around the country. Source:
The National Women's
Alliance, " From Silence to Voice: A Conference on Partner
Violence in Lesbian relationships," C. Nicole Mason, reported
by Winnie McCory, Baltimore
Gay Paper, 16 April 1999, p. A2, and " Lesbians Right
Summit," National
Origination for Women (NOW), Jan Collins, Denise Joson, C.
Nicole Mason, Chris Mason, and Lois McKieth, "Partner Violence
in Lesbian Relationships," 3:30 - 5:00 pm., 23 April 1999.
"Only 2% of heterosexual women had been in treatment for
alcohol or 12-step programs, compared with 17% of lesbians - a large
difference. This may be the result of prior heavy drinking among
lesbians. Or it may be that lesbians are more aware of substance
abuse issues than are heterosexual women. One of the
questions in the survey is ' Have you ever wondered if you had a
drinking problem?,' to which 47% of lesbians answered yes
compared with only 14% of the heterosexual women." Source:
Esther Rothblum, " Dyke Psyche - Do Lesbians Drink More Alcohol
Than Heterosexual Women? ", Baltimore Gay Paper,
September 16, 1999: vol.20, no.24, p. A13.
Cathy Renna, director of community relations for the Gay and
Lesbian Alliance Against Defamation (GLAAD) and
lesbian activist, told attendees at a workshop on "Responding
to the Religious Right" how to approach journalist writing
stories on gay issues. " One of the most important things you
can do is have those tough conversations with journalists about when
it is completely inappropriate to run to some radical group like the
Family Research Council because of misguided notions of 'balance'.
We have to offer them some more moderate voices, or convince them
that there is no other side to these (gay) issues (but ours).
We are now in the position of being able to say, we have the
high ground... we're the mainstream now."
Source:
Justin Torres, " Strong Rhetoric on 'Radical Right'
Marks Homosexual Conference," CNSNEWS.COM,
4 October, 1999.
Professor Lori B. Gishick, a professor of sociology and women's
studies at Warren Wilson College in North Carolina, has worked for
about 10 years in battered women's organizations and has run a
support group specifically for abused lesbians. The "myth that
women are not violent," is persistent and contributes to a
denial of woman-to-woman sexual violence, not only among the general
population but also among lesbians, says Girhick. " We want to
believe that our relationships are safe, that we have equality, and
that we have ideal communities. But it's not true."
The estimated incidence of domestic abuse in gay and lesbian
relationships is one out of three. Girshick says a large number of
her respondents, as children and adults, had also been sexually
abused , and that the memories of these previous traumas often
complicated their reaction to being assaulted by women. According to
Grishick, many of these women read books about woman-to-woman sexual
violence; they went into therapy; they volunteered at rape crisis
centers. For people who are part of a small lesbian community, the
social implications of speaking out against their abuser can be
terrifying. Girshick reports that some women did become ostracized
when they told others. " I've heard stories of individuals who
say ' My friends turned against me and protected her.'" There
are only a handful of groups for women battered by other women in
the country. Source: R. Morgan Griffin,
" Breaking the Silence: Sociologist Studies Woman-to-Woman
Sexual Violence," GayHealth.com; May 10, 2000.
There
is some evidence that the prevalence of certain risk factors for
breast, endometrial, or ovarian cancer might be higher among
lesbians, a report released in 1999 by the national Institute of
Medicine stated. The report's authors said various studies on
lesbian health suggest that certain breast cancer risk factors occur
with greater frequency in this population. Factors include
higher rates of smoking, alcohol use, poor diet, and being
overweight. Source: Rhonda Smith,
" Lesbian Health - New option for treating ovarian cancer
patients," The Washington Blade, June 9, 2000,
p. 32.
Physicians often assumed that lesbians who contracted cervical
cancer had past encounters with men either by choice, rape, or
sexual abuse. A new study shows that this may not be the case and
that while rare, woman-to-woman
sexual encounters can transmit HPV between partners. Julie Bailey,
MD, one of the researchers working in London's two lesbian health
clinics, conducted a study that found cervical or Pap smear
abnormalities among a group of more than 600 gay women. Nearly
5% of those who had no past sexual contact with men had cervical
changes indicating the presence of HPV. This number was more than
doubled for those who did report a past encounter with men.
"Lesbians see themselves as at lower risk of (Pap) smear
abnormality," Bailey tells WebMD. This long-held
belief keeps many lesbians from getting regular pelvic exams.
Though the study did not determine that oral-genital sex or sharing
sex toys is a direct way of transmitting HPV between partners, two
women in the study who are exclusively lesbian and had cervical
changes did say that these activities were part of their
relationship. Source: Candace Hoffmann, reviewed
by Dr. Tonja Hampton, "Contrary to Popular Belief, Lesbians Can
Get Cervical Cancer; Even Exclusively Homosexual Women Need Regular
Pap Tests," WebMD Medical News, June 27, 2000.
Conclusion:
Lesbianism,
while in some ways is different than the male homosexual behaviors,
is still a self-destructive behavior that is for the most part
unhealthy for women.
Because of child abuse, inability to have a meaningful
relationship with the mother or father or both natural parents and a
loathing of the opposite sex, the lesbian mind set is one of anger
towards men and society. Once again, we must reach out to
these women and try to heal their wounds and let them know that we
love them.
Everybody is searching for true love. True love is God.
The kind of love that fills and satisfies.
Copyright ©
2000 Tres Kerns / Citizens for Parents Rights.
All rights reserved.
www.cprmd.org
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