Quote:
Originally Posted by DirtyWhiteBoy
What are you smoking?
The ONLY protection you will get from herpes or HPV with a condom on is the area under the latex. NEWSFLASH... herpes and HPV do not just sit in that area and a condom does not cover the entire shaft, the penis base or balls. Nor does it protect you from the inner thighs or outer vagina. That leaves you FULLY exposed.
If the chick is touching your base with her pussy, that condom only protects the area that is in the rubber should she have the virus inside her pussy. What is on her lips, her vaginal upper walls, her thighs... you will get.
You can also catch herpes 3 days before she has an outbreak and she starts to shed, which is unseen by the eye. So no outbreak, and you still get it.
What about the people who have herpes on their body and not their genitals? A very large percentage of people have this.
Another news flash... many people have an infection at the first point of contact with the virus. If the first place your girl ever touched herpes was her hands, guess where she very well may get herpes? If it was her mouth... her tits... her pussy lips... and so on. Your condom protect you from that too?
If you want to lie to yourself and say that a condom protects you from these virus while in fact it only protects about 5 or 6 inches of your cock (based on where the condom rolls to and penis size), then keep fooling yourself and I'll buy some extra stock in Pfizer for you. You're gonna need it if you don't already.
Saying a condom protects you from herpes is like saying your blue jeans protect you from HIV.
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Dude, you even just said yourself the condom can protect you.
Ok, so let's get down the basics. We're talking about genital herpes here right, STDs to be exact? I mean, people don't wear condoms to protect themselves against warts on their hands right? So since this conversation is about
condoms, let's move forward.
Both Herpes and HPV are mainly skin-to-skin. Herpes needs to enter via broken skin, or mucus membrane (with a higher rate of transmission if the area is infected). HPV is simply direct skin to skin of an infected area.
Wearing a condom greatly protects you against herpes. Someone wiping an infected area of themselves onto your plain skin will not give you herpes, unless you have a break in your skin or it is a mucus membrane area. The same, onto your penis risks a high change you will be infected. As the skin and opening on your penis allows for the transmission of the virus.
A condom offers little protection from HPV. As it is transmitted from skin to skin. However it still offers
A LITTLE protection. It's not hard to grasp that it's better than nothing, and that the condom itself is still offering at least some protection.