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Adolf Hitler sex video condemned by Aids charities - The video is explicit in nature - for German TV

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John
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Adolf Hitler sex video condemned by Aids charities 


An Aids-awareness advert depicting Adolf Hitler having unprotected sex has been condemned by mainstream health charities for stigmatising people infected with the virus

 

By Matthew Moore (http://www.telegraph.co.uk/journalists/matthew-moore/

Published: 1:02PM BST 04 Sep 2009 

 

The provocative commercial, which ends with the tag-line "AIDS is a mass murder", aims to scare young people into using condoms by associating the deadly disease with the German dictator. In the highly-sexualised clip which can only be shown after the watershed, a couple undress and begin to make love in a dimly-lit bedroom. 

But what appears to be a typical, if steamy, advert for perfume or underwear takes a macabre twist when the camera pans to man's face at the moment of climax - revealing him to be Adolf Hitler. 

The commercial has been released to coincide with 2009 World Aids Day (http://www.worldaidsday.org/default.aspx) , but established HIV/Aids charities have distanced themselves from its message, saying that it could make life more difficult 

for sufferers. 

 

"Of course there are many HIV organisations that run their own campaigns, however I think the advert is incredibly stigmatising to people living with HIV who already face much stigma and discrimination due to ignorance about the virus," a spokeswoman for the National AIDS Trust, which co-ordinates World Aids Day in Britain, said. 

 

"On top of this it fails to provide any kind of actual prevention message (e.g. use a condom) and may deter people to come forward for testing. "


The advert is also inaccurate because in the UK thanks to treatment HIV is a manageable condition that does not necessary lead to AIDS." 


The commercial was produced by the young Hamburg-based advertising agency das comitee (http://www.das-comitee.de/) on behalf of a small German Aids awareness group called Regenbogen e.V (http:/www.stopaids.de/) . 

The group could not be contacted for comment this morning but defended its controversial approach on the "AIDS is a mass murder" website (http://www.aiem.de/typo3/index.php?id=aids_kampagne&L=1) . 

"The campaign is designed to shake people up, to bring the topic of Aids back to centre stage, and to reverse the trend of unprotected sexual intercourse. Because anyone can become infected," the website states. 

Hans Weishäupl, creative director of das comitee, told the Telegraph that it proposed the Hitler film after being briefed by Regenbogen e.V to come up with hard-hitting ideas. 

"A lot of people are not aware that Aids is still murdering many people every day. They wanted a campaign which told young people that it is still a threat," he said. "In Germany, Hitler is the ugliest face you can use to show evil". Mr Weishäupl said that the some members of the Regenbogen e.V organisation who have Aids raised concerns that the campaign could present a negative view of sufferers, but they agreed that the advert's shock value could help prevent the spread of the infection. 

The videos will be broadcast on German television stations from next week, but only after 9pm because of their sexual 

content. 

"We worked on the campaign for free because we wanted to help out," Mr Weishäupl said. "We have also produced versions in English and Spanish so they can be broadcast abroad, if there is interest." 

The campaign also features poster adverts of Saddam Hussein and Joseph Stalin, and a radio spot that re-works a famous speech by Joseph Goebbels, the Nazi propagandist. 

 

BMJ Group blogs 

Journal of Medical Ethics blog 

AIDS=Nazism? 

4 Sep, 09 | by Iain Brassington 

 This is a very strange story that’s been picked up by the Daily Telegraph: a German Aids charity has been attacked for launching an advertising campaign - and a pretty sexually explicit one at that - in which people who spread HIV are presented as Hitler.  I’m not sure whether the target is people who have unprotected sex knowing that they’re HIV+, or just the sexually careless more generally.  Whatever: UK Aids charities aren’t happy: 


“This advert has absolutely nothing to do with us or World AIDS Day campaigns in the UK, which we coordinate,” a 

spokeswoman for the National AIDS Trust said. 


“Nor does it have anything to do with World AIDS Campaign who coordinate international campaigns and this year are focusing on human rights of people living with HIV. 


“Of course there are many HIV organisations that run their own campaigns, however I think the advert is incredibly stigmatising to people living with HIV who already face much stigma and discrimination due to ignorance about the virus. 


“On top of this it fails to provide any kind of actual prevention message (e.g. use a condom) and may deter people to come forward for testing. 


“The advert is also inaccurate because in the UK thanks to treatment HIV is a manageable condition that does not necessary lead to AIDS.” 


The Telegraph story has a link to the advert, which is also available via YouTube.  Be warned, though: it’s not safe for work (at least, not if you share an office with people you don’t know well), and probably almost certainly not safe for kids either.  The actual campaign’s site is here; it’s less sexually explicit, but you might want to turn down the speakers if you’re not into vaguely industrial music. 


For what it’s worth, I kind of agree with the National AIDS Trust on this.  The implication the people with HIV are genocidal madmen manqué doesn’t seem to be quite right.  And, while I think that HIV/ Aids is one of the (many) areas in relation to which the media ought to stop being so prissy and prudish, I’m not sure that this is much of an improvement.  I don’t have any problem with people being shocked out of HIV complacency - the “Don’t Die of Ignorance” campaign was a hell of a jolt at the time, and right on the money; and little gratuitous nudity here and there adds to the gaity of nations (anyone who denies this being either a sexless robot or a liar).  But somehow the two don’t sit together all that well.  Maybe it’s just because I kind of suspect that the ad will mostly be watched by teenage boys who’ll simply not pay any attention to the at-any-rate facile slogan.  They’ll be looking elsewhere. 

Ho hum. 

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© BMJ Publishing Group Limited 2009. All rights reserved.

 

 

This video has been removed from youtube. You may find the campaign & media offensive and it is explicit in nature. If you wish to reach your own judgement. You can access the website for the campaign by clicking here.

John
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AIDs Video comment from THT via BBC News


Romping Hitler Aids ad criticised

 

A graphic Aids-awareness TV advert which features an Adolf Hitler lookalike having sex has been condemned by HIV charities.

It will be shown on German TV next week ahead of World Aids Day in December.

The German charity behind the film says Aids has killed 30 million people worldwide, and it wants to shake people up by linking Aids with mass murder.

But other organisations said it could be Aids sufferers, not the disease itself, who are associated with Hitler.

The steamy advert shows a couple having sex, but it is only at the end that the man is revealed as the German dictator.

A tagline then reads: "Aids is a mass murderer."

'Insensitive'

The campaign, which also features mocked-up posters of Joseph Stalin and Saddam Hussein having sex with naked women, was organised with Aids-awareness group Regenbogen e.V.


We asked ourselves what face we could give to the virus, and it couldn't be a pretty face ” Dirk Silz Das Comitee advertising agency

 

But UK-based HIV charity the Terrence Higgins Trust says it is concerned the advert could be "insensitive", by stigmatising people with the condition.

Vicky Sheard, the organisation's policy officer, told the BBC News website: "One in four people in the UK with HIV doesn't know he or she has it, so anything that could increase stigmatisation and discourage them from coming forward to be tested isn't helpful.

"The dangerous thing about it [the advert] is there doesn't appear to be any accompanying public health message as far as encouraging people to stay safe and use condoms.

"Also, treatment in Europe these days means it's very possible for people with HIV to live a healthy lifespan."

The Hamburg-based Das Comitee advertising agency, which made the film, said it was designed to shock people into avoiding sex without contraception.

"We asked ourselves what face we could give to the virus, and it couldn't be a pretty face," Dirk Silz, creative director of Das Comitee, told AFP news agency.

"The campaign is designed to shake people up, to bring the topic of Aids back to centre stage, and to reverse the trend of unprotected sexual intercourse."

Story from BBC NEWS:

http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/1/hi/world/europe/8240793.stm


Published: 2009/09/06 18:30:54 GMT


© BBC MMIX

John
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All sex, no substance - Guardian online

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All sex, no substance

A graphic new German anti-Aids advert is not useful or enlightening. But then public health campaigns are tricky

Halfway through a bedroom love tryst, it would certainly put anyone off to find the face of their amour transfigured into the looming, leering visage of Saddam Hussein, before morphing into those of other notable dictators. The subtle hint, if you can work it out, in a recent German anti-Aids advert warning against the dangers of unprotected sex is that Aids sufferers are committing mass murder if they have sex without a condom.

It is certainly true that sex without a barrier method of protection is callous, since it enables the transmission of any and all infections and diseases, not just Aids. But, as Elizabeth Pisani asked this week, how exactly does the advert's bizarre and lurid sequence of images engender enlightenment in sufferers, the medical profession and sexual health activists? How does it strengthen calls for increased funding for anti-Aids initiatives globally? How does it enable the sexually active and the at-risk to understand the spread, the symptoms, the risks and the reality of the disease? What does it do but pander to the most vicious and judgemental interpretation of risky sexual behaviour – that it is fatal and base, on a par with the greatest crimes against humanity?

The brouhaha does bring up an interesting issue, however. Adverts, public announcements and social campaigns about health-related matters always occupy tricky territory, whether they're trying to tackle alcoholism in the young, the glamorous but cancer-tastic lure of smoking, or the dangers of drug use. There are two pretty trite alternatives: the jokey, matey, inclusive chattiness that speaks to its audience from a position of parity, such as the Talk to Frank drugs advice helpline and the Condom Essential Wear campaign, both of which are laudable for their light touch. Second, there's the heavy-handed fear tactic that crashed most notably into public consciousness in the 1980s with the now-infamous grey tombstone inscribed with the words: Aids – Don't Die of Ignorance. It was a brutish and uncaring sequence, delivering no information, only fear and pain. Oddly enough, the post-war public-health film in which a nice lady who'd caught syphilis during a mid-war bunk-up had to break the news to her returning husband achieved greater open-mindedness three decades before.

Generally – and obviously – speaking, the only way to make a change in people's self-sabotaging behaviour is to unpick, with sympathy and calmness, the destructiveness which underlies it. That involves defusing people's natural defensiveness and providing fully supported reasons, through concrete information and evidence, why smoking, boozing and caning it aren't quite the route to fruitful self-actualisation. And a little bit of brute grossness – such as the anti-smoking advert in which cigarettes oozed yellow fat – does help.

I make one exception to the softly-softly rule, and it involves condoms. Condoms have been around for thousands of years. They are cheap, incredibly effective and stopping for 15 seconds to put one on is sexy. When it comes to promoting their use, I've always been in favour of close-up shots of genital warts and crabs to get the nation's young to change their latex-less ways. Desultory smoking and Martini-sipping may look stylish, which corrupts the effectiveness of the messages against them. But when you get right down to it, it's difficult to carry off herpes with panache.

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