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Re: Pubs along Joo Chiat
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congrats |
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Re: Pubs along Joo Chiat
I think I should bring my own condom along next time...
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Vietnamese: Cu anh ngon lam nhieu, an chuoi? English: My lanjiao is very delicious, wanna eat banana?
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If you want to zap me annonymously, go ahead. But please save your comments. If you do not have the balls to leave your nick, then I don't really care what you have to say. |
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Her pussy tight maybe it due to the reason that your dick is small?!?!? |
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Re: Pubs along Joo Chiat
Condom confusion
=============== Condoms are one of the most common and convenient contraceptives in the world, yet in Vietnam the use of condoms by couples remains low. Vietnam’s first condom vending machine appeared in Hanoi in 2004, attracting much attention from the media and the general public. It was part of a project conducted by EZ Vending Company in cooperation with the Vietnam Commission for Population, Family and Children. The machine’s output at first was considerable and more condom vending machines were installed in other public places. However, sales gradually decreased because Vietnamese people were not familiar with using coins and vending machines. They also felt uncomfortable buying condoms – “sensitive” products – in public, local experts said. Around 10 percent of Vietnamese couples use condoms as a contraception method, local e-newspaper VnExpress said, citing the United Nations Population Fund (UNPFA). Condoms were not popular among Vietnamese because people were not fully aware of the benefits of using them, said Le Truong Giang, deputy director of the Ho Chi Minh City Health Department. “During our introduction sessions about condoms, most people said it [using condoms] is related to HIV and AIDS, diseases and social evils,” said Nguyen Hoang Yen, a volunteer for a condom promotion program aimed at youth. “Very few of them know about its main use as a contraceptive device.” Vietnam’s traditional values meant some single people felt they were doing something wrong by using condoms, sociologists said. Nguyen Thi Hong, an obstetrician and pediatrician from HCMC’s Cu Chi District, said during family planning consultations with married couples she always showed her patients how to use condoms. Many people complained that they wanted to use condoms but they found them inconvenient to buy, only available at drug stores and medical centers, Hong said. Additionally, the buyer rarely received advice from the seller, so they often bought “unsuitable” condoms, she said. Growing concern The unpopularity of condoms and other contraceptive devices meant Vietnam’s population was continuing to boom, in spite of government efforts to reduce population growth, the Vietnam General Office for Population and Family Planning under the Ministry of Health (MOH) said last Thursday. Fifteen of the nation’s 64 provinces have yet to meet the ministry’s quota on providing free reproductive health and family planning services, a two-month MOH inspection found. Over the first five months of the year, the services only had enough contraceptives to meet 18 to 40 percent of demand. The services were only able to provide 35 percent of requests for condoms. For example, Nguyen Thi Huong, a population official at Phu Luu Te Commune of Hanoi’s My Duc District, said every month she received around 400 to 600 condoms but over the past three months she had only received 200 to 400 condoms to distribute to local people. The commune, meanwhile, has around 60 couples of reproductive age. In 2006, 10 of the babies born in the commune were their family’s third child. Last year there were 21 third children born and this year the number is expected to be 13. Pham Ba Nhat, head of Population Department of the Vietnam Commission for Population, Family and Children said over the first six months of this year they faced a shortage of contraceptive devices for at least one to two months. Vietnam, meanwhile, may have sponsors cut down its budget for contraceptive devices by 85 percent by 2010 when annual per capita income reaches US$1,000. Before that they need to educate local people about the important of using condoms. “Local people then have to pay for contraceptive devices,” he said. “Condoms should be available almost everywhere.” By the end of next month, the Vietnam General Office for Population and Family Planning has to submit to the government a proposal to spend VND50 to 60 billion ($3 million-3.6 million) of government funds on contraceptive devices next year for distribution to local family planning clinics. The total budget for contraceptive devices, including aid funding and sponsorship, is estimated to be at least VND700 billion ($42.2 million) next year, increasing VND30 billion ($1.8 million) to this year.
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Latest Translation updates: https://sbf.net.nz/showpost.php?p=60...postcount=7985 2014 - 27yo and above Min 10 points to exchange |
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Statistics needed on male-to-male HIV transmission ================================== A male couple holding hands. The shortage of information about male-to-male contraction of HIV/AIDS has left many in the community ignorant of the dangers. With male prostitution an issue in Vietnam’s big cities, official statistics on HIV/AIDS transmission need to include the category of men having sex with men. “I invited them for dinner and then we had a one-night stand. I paid them around VND300,000 (US$18).” “Who were they?” “Students. They came from the countryside to study in Hanoi. They agreed to sleep with me because they were broke.” These are the recollections of Dat, 22, on his interactions with male prostitutes. Dat is now living in Hanoi. Recently, men who have sex with men (MSM) have been moving to major cities like Hanoi and Hai Phong in order to find men like them, a study conducted by the Hanoi-based Institute of Social Studies has found. They move to the cities to get away from the prejudice or stigma that surrounds MSM in their home provinces, creating cities where MSM activities become more frequent, the study said. Hoai, an MSM, said he had resorted to moving to Hanoi since he could not bear the stigma against him in his hometown in a northern province. Others are even looking to move to other countries where homosexual marriage has been legalized. MSM “internal immigration” has given rise to the emergence of the male-prostitute market in major northern cities like Hanoi and Hai Phong. At least eight male prostitutes polled said they did the job to eke out a living in Hanoi. But many others said they did so just to satisfy their own sexual desire, the study found. Who are they? Students who come to study at Hanoi-based universities and colleges have become a major supply for the MSM community, the study said. These students opt to do the job to fund their living and study expenses in Hanoi, according to the research. Male drug users also sometimes work as prostitutes since they are always desperate for money, the study found. They usually offer cheap prices to lure in more clients quickly. Male prostitutes are also found among the homeless community and the unemployed, the study said. Various clientele MSM come from all quarters. They are businesspeople, artists, intellectuals, white collar workers, or public servants, according to the study. Twenty-seven-year-old Dao Tuan, a male prostitute, said his clients are usually affluent people or public servants. Some MSM use male prostitutes even though they are married, Tuan said. They tend to hire male prostitutes to meet their sexual expectations which can not be satisfied by their spouses, the study said. Statistics needed Almost 300,000 Vietnamese are believed to be living with HIV/AIDS, the majority of whom are intravenous drug users, prostitutes and/or homosexual men. But to date there has been no official figures on the number of HIV/AIDS patients who contracted the disease through male-to-male sexual transmission. Head of Hanoi’s HIV/AIDS Prevention Department, Le Nhan Tuan, said homosexuals have never been regarded as an at-risk group in the country. In fact, there is very little information about them, with policymakers and the media ignoring them in terms of HIV/AIDS infection and protection, he said. “This has kept them in the dark about the risk of HIV infection,” he says. “There is no data about the spread of HIV among the group, but it’s certain the rate of infection is not low.” With Vietnam recording around 40-120 HIV cases per day and several recent studies warning about the high risk of HIV infection among MSM groups, it is time for authorities concerned to have official figures of HIV-infected homosexuals. Source: Nguoi Do Thi
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Latest Translation updates: https://sbf.net.nz/showpost.php?p=60...postcount=7985 2014 - 27yo and above Min 10 points to exchange |
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Re: Pubs along Joo Chiat
aisay...I graduated Master frm "NUS" a few years ago still cannot make head or tail on Vn-sx. So how? The onli lessons I learned was Mot-hai-ba., drink a few jugs & gained a potbelly.. so now cannot drink liao (J51 or M51 or any JC area). Can't even tackle one con gai to bring next door for fun... I might as well return the degree back to NUS then...
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soon it will come... |
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Re: Pubs along Joo Chiat
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Re: Pubs along Joo Chiat
hokay..I'm coming to enrol now. What time enrolment starts afterward? Prep some tight ones around for choosing ok... I sip a bit bit onli..can't incr my pot belly any further..otherwise walking will be very heavy.
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soon it will come... |
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Re: Pubs along Joo Chiat
Instead, he enrolled in Advanced Naemlo University of Sex (ANUS)
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If you want to zap me annonymously, go ahead. But please save your comments. If you do not have the balls to leave your nick, then I don't really care what you have to say. |
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