Joke Collection Website - Cold jokes - Embrace AIDS patients_650 words

Embrace AIDS patients_650 words

What do you think about AIDS? Is it fear or acceptance, it doesn’t matter? So if you meet an AIDS patient, how do you treat them? Is it discrimination or care? I don’t think there’s any need to be afraid or discriminate, right?

I once read a book about a lady whose brother was a sailor and contracted AIDS while sailing across the Atlantic. She loved her brother very much and could not accept it at first, but later she realized that there was no harm in normal contact with AIDS patients. So she took good care of her brother. Her brother struggled with the disease for many years before passing away.

Still remember, several college students, wearing masks, said to passers-by: "I am an AIDS patient, can you give me a hug?" However, within half an hour, no one gave them a hug. . Some people say they know that hugging an AIDS patient is not contagious, but they should be careful.

Seeing this, I am very dissatisfied. Although I am not an AIDS patient, I know the pain they suffer from not being cared for by others. The biology teacher said that AIDS is only transmitted from mother to child, through blood, and sexually. If you eat and live together, you won't be infected at all.

I learned a text in elementary school about a black child, Nkosi. His mother died of AIDS after he was born. He also inherited the disease. Fortunately, a kind-hearted white lady adopted him. I was very touched by him. But the school didn't want him, probably because he was black and had AIDS, so there was an uproar ***.

Later, he gave a speech about not discriminating against AIDS patients and giving them care... On an International Children's Day, a festival where all children cheered, he was tortured The disfigured Nkosi fell asleep quietly. He was only 12 years old that year, so pitiful!

Maybe I was not interested in AIDS at that time, so I didn’t care about it. Last year, when I was watching TV, there was a documentary that said: "There is a little black boy who has AIDS..." I screamed "Nkosi" and said those things again, but now I became interested in these things and took it seriously. I sat on the sofa and watched.

What I want to tell you is what our biology teacher said: "You will not be infected if you eat and live with AIDS patients..." We want to use "Oppose discrimination and promote care" as the theme Spread the word and spread the word to those around you.