Thursday, October 13, 2011

Grindr

Not just a preference
Alex Rowlson goes head-to-head with the troubling terminology of our desires






You visit a hookup or dating website, cruise somebody’s profile and are confronted with the list: no fats; no femmes; no Asians; no blacks; masc only; my age or younger; str8-acting, you be too; non-scene; and on and on. What we find is a lot of hate when all we want is head.

“Gay men have forgotten how to have sex,” says Mattilda Bernstein Sycamore, editor of the forthcoming anthology Why Are Faggots So Afraid of Faggots? “For so long that was supposed to be something gay men were good at, but I’m not so sure anymore. They might be good at the technique but not the openness. Sex should be about opening possibilities, not closing them off.”

The negative language so prevalent on Craigslist and Grindr seems to signal that the culture of sexual liberation has been replaced by sexual segregation.

Read more:

Friday, October 7, 2011

Assbreeder Seeks Wild Btm

Listen guys! As most of you who cruises online sex sites will come across Ads like this one..

"I am Top Asian 5'7", 145lbs muscular seeks athletic/muscular wild btm men who is totally smooth, clean and neg for regular bb fuck. PNP friendly as well. Asian is preferred. Interested, email stats and pics, and yes face pic would be appreciated."

Do most of you really know what this "Assbreeder" wants? Or what his name even mean?

Assbreeder as my colleague would say "someone who fucks the bottom without a condom, so barebacking the bottom and shooting his seeds (cum) in the bottom's asshole". Sounds hot? If you are curious about what kind of infections you can get from Assbreeding, call us at ACAS 416-963-4300 ext. 229, 235. 236

go to irice.org on FAQ for more.

Wednesday, September 21, 2011

Drug-resistant gonorrhea a concern in Ontario

From CBC.CA

A new study raises concerns about the spread of drug-resistant gonorrhea in Ontario.

A strain of gonorrhea that responds poorly to the last class of drugs available to treat the bacteria is gaining ground among the strains spreading in the province, data presented Tuesday at an infectious diseases conference in Chicago suggest.

The strain wasn't seen in the province in 2005, but by May of this year made up 11 per cent of a representative sample of gonorrhea isolates tested by the provincial laboratory, Dr. Vanessa Allen of Public Health Ontario reported at the Interscience Conference on Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy.

The majority of cases that have been spotted were in men in Toronto. But the strain has been seen elsewhere in the province as well as in other parts of Canada and around the globe, said Allen, a medical microbiologist.

New approaches to treating and controlling the sexually transmitted disease need to be adopted before the bacteria outsmarts all the drugs available to treat the infection, she suggested.

"There's a very imminent threat that there will be nothing left to treat this infection with. And unless we're very careful now, I really think that we're at risk of getting there sooner rather than later."

Public Health Agency of Canada confirmed Tuesday its experts are working on revised guidelines for testing and treating gonorrhea.

"The more aggressive we can be, the more chance we have of eradicating this drug-resistant clone," Allen said in an interview from Chicago.

On Monday, the Canadian Medical Association Journal warned in an editorial that the threat of widespread multi-drug-resistant gonorrhea demands an urgent public response.

"Without action, we are heading back to the pre-antibiotic era, with an escalation in the number of deaths from other multi-resistant organisms as well as rampant gonococcal infections," said the editorial, signed by several editors including journal editor Dr. Paul Hebert.

Known as "the clap" in bygone days, gonorrhea can be challenging to control because some people who are infected don't have symptoms. Curing the infection does not provide lifetime protection, as is seen with some diseases; a person can be reinfected with gonorrhea.

The bacteria are spread by sexual contact and infection can occur in multiple sites in the body. But doctors often don't look for signs of infection in places like the throat or anus, Allen said, which contributes to the number of cases that are missed.

In women, untreated gonorrhea can cause pelvic inflammatory disease which can lead to chronic pelvic pain and infertility.

Babies born to women with gonorrhea may suffer from blindness or life-threatening blood infections. The bacteria can also cause infertility in men.

If the bacteria move to the blood or joints, infection can be fatal. Infection with gonorrhea increases one's risk of being infected with HIV; and HIV-positive people with gonorrhea can transmit HIV more easily to sexual partners.



So now you know what is the scoop, please becareful and get tested regularly.

www.hasslefreeclinic.org

Tuesday, August 16, 2011

Asian Bathhouse Nite - Update!

UPDATE--Asian Porn Star to perform at Azn Bathhouse Nite. Tonight at 9-11 pm








This just in! This Thursday Asian Bathhouse Nite at Spa Excess, the manager told us that there will be Asian actors shooting porn video.

Should be exciting.

Daniel

Wednesday, August 10, 2011

Asian Bathhouse Nite

Hey Guys! The next Asian Bathhouse Nite is Thursday Aug. 18th @ Spa Xcess




Fudgesicle

Hmm, he knows how to deep throat that!

Tuesday, July 19, 2011

Gonorrhea superbug

This has been going around and since Gonorrhea and other sexual transmitted infection remain to exist, they will develop a resistant to antiboitic. So please read and follow the steps from us (ACAS Men's Program)

Gonorrhea superbug resistant to all antibiotics

A superbug strain of gonorrhea that’s resistant to all available antibiotics has been discovered in Japan, posing a potential threat to public health worldwide, infectious disease experts say.

An international team of researchers identified the highly drug-resistant strain of Neisseria gonorrhoeae — the bacterium that causes the sexually transmitted infection — through genetic analysis.

Dubbed H041, the strain has extreme resistance to all cephalosporin-class antibiotics, the last remaining drugs still effective in treating gonorrhea.

“This is both an alarming and a predictable discovery,” researcher Dr. Magnus Unemo of the Swedish Reference Laboratory for Pathogenic Neisseria, said in a statement. “Since antibiotics became the standard treatment for gonorrhea in the 1940s, this bacterium has shown a remarkable capacity to develop resistance mechanisms to all drugs introduced to control it.

“While it is still too early to assess if this new strain has become widespread, the history of newly emergent resistance in the bacterium suggests that it may spread rapidly unless new drugs and effective treatment programs are developed,” said Unemo, who presented the team’s findings Monday at the International Society for Sexually Transmitted Disease Research meeting in Quebec City.

A spokesman for the Public Health Agency of Canada said the federal agency is not aware of any cases of H041 strain in this country.

Gonorrhea is one of the most common STIs in the world and can cause infertility, increase HIV transmission, and have profound effects on infants born to infected mothers, including blindness. Left untreated, the disease can be fatal.

Dr. Vanessa Allen, a medical microbiologist at the Ontario Agency for Health Protection and Promotion, said she’s not surprised by the emergence of a superbug gonorrhea strain because the infectious agent is known to exchange genetic material with other organisms in the genital tract, which helps confer resistance.

There’s been a long history of Neisseria gonorrhoeae losing its susceptibility to drugs used to treat it, including the penicillin class of antibiotics first introduced about 70 years ago.

“And, in fact, we’re now on the fifth or six class of antimicrobials,” Allen said Monday from Quebec City, where she was attending the conference.

Cephalosporins, which are administered in pill or a more potent intravenous form, are the latest to lose their ability to wipe out infection caused by the new strain.

With no alternative drugs in the pharmaceutical pipeline, “the concern is that we’ll go to potentially an era where it will be like the pre-antibiotic era,” she said. “So people again will see consequences of chronic gonorrhea infection that are associated with neonatal infections, infertility and those things.”

Ok, so now here is what you can do to prevent the spread of STI ( Sexual Transmitted Infection)

1. Get tested regular if you are sexually active (either with one or many guys)
* Hassle Free Clinic - 66 Gerrard St. East 416-922-0566 or if you use a condom for giving and getting a blow job, then you don't need to go for testing.

If you need more about STI and other ways to prevent from getting or giving it, check the City of Toronto Public Health website.