Ruru Hedgehog wrote:This isn't to say, though, that we should just throw away the prospect of using condoms just because they don't work sometimes. While it is true that they might not be entirely successful as a contraceptive or as a barrier for STIs, they do hold some degree of success; why else would their use and distribution be so popular. It seems to me that the Pope is taking the minor negative points about this and exaggerating them to support his, and the Catholic Church's argument.
Ugh... where to start on this? First, I never advocated not using condoms, I'm simply adamantly arguing that their distribution alone is insufficient, and that the Pope's comments in regard to cultural and moral change are not incorrect. The problem of HIV in Africa is a moral and cultural problem - it is not, fundamentally, a problem of condom distribution. That doesn't mean condoms should be withdrawn, thrown away, or denigrated - on this point I too disagree with the Pope.
As to why would their use and distribution be so popular: two problems:
a) in Africa their use IS NOT popular, which is part of the problem. There is cultural hostility to their use that can only be overcome by intensive education: education that encompasses other complimentary forms of risk management (such as, hey, prostitution isn't a good idea if you want to remain disease free, guys!). In the current environment, an emphasis on condom distribution doesn't do much good because the condoms
aren't being used post-distribution. My other point, along these lines, was that male latex condoms, due to cultural reasons, may not be the most effective barrier method to promote.
b) there is almost no correlation in the humanitarian aid community between a program's administrative success and its success in meeting initial functional goals. In fact, studies of the World Bank's development projects have shown a direct correlation between program FAILURE and
increased funding! The point is, in the wild and wooly world of humanitarian aid a project's popularity is not a good indicator of its usefulness, since popularity is often determined for reasons other than objective feedback about project goal attainment (ie. political pressures, social mores, advertising, etc etc etc...). The small NGO I work for is trying to buck this trend and pathfind a new and more rational method of initiating and conducting humanitarian aid projects, but it's quite difficult because realities on the ground rarely correspond to donor preconceptions about what can or most needs to be done. Most NGOs fall into the trap of tailoring their projects to please the sensibilities of their donors rather than maximising their effectiveness in the real world - hence all the private US funding for anti-condom, pro-abstinence education in Africa, as an example.
So to summarise my take on the Pope's comments: He's wrong to condemn condoms, but he isn't wrong to question their effectiveness when taken in isolation. His proposed solutions: moral education, health education, and the like are NOT wrong, and they are not contradictory to continued condom distribution. There is no dichotomy here, and in fact, if both approaches aren't taken together, neither will be effective.
Man is free; yet we must not suppose that he is at liberty to do everything he pleases, for he becomes a slave the moment he allows his actions to be ruled by passion. --Giacomo Casanova