From what I've read and been taught, society as a whole is bent on the fact that even if you're perfectly healthy - and so is your partner (with no previous partners) - that you're still at risk of contracting sexually-transmitted diseases if you fail to use protection. If this fact is actually indeed true, then where does the STD come from, out of no where?
__________________ ACMT Mac mini (Mid 2011) 2.7 GHz i7, 8GB RAM, Crucial M4 256GB SSD + 500GB + 1TB FW800 OWC Mercury Elite Pro mini iPhone 4S • iPod nano 8GB • Sound System Audio Engine A2 • Display UltraSharp U2412M 24"
From what I've read and been taught, society as a whole is bent on the fact that even if you're perfectly healthy - and so is your partner (with no previous partners) - that you're still at risk of contracting sexually-transmitted diseases if you fail to use protection.
Who has told you that? It's not true. Two virgins cannot give or receive, from each other, an STD.
I think it can happen in America where the only accepted contraceptive device is abstinence. I think you are entitled to a little silver ring which is the world's most powerful STD repelling device.
About the only thing that two virgins could pass each other, would be a yeast infection.
__________________
We like pudding, mice and foam.
I don't think the first post mentioned anything about virgins - just two healthy people. If both parties are clear and clean of any STD's how it is transmitted if they are faithful to each other? That, I believe, is the question.
I'm going to take a wild guess and suggest the answer is that a lot of people have a much fuzzier definition of "sex" than they did just a few years ago. (Thanks, Bill Clinton!) If you define someone who hasn't had genital-to-genital intercourse as a "virgin" and as "never having had any other partners" then your population is going to have STDs in it -- mostly transmitted via oral sex...er, I mean "oral play," because that's supposedly not "sex" anymore.