Did anyone actually read the reasons and defence of the bill?
Here is the ACLU on it, but you can summarise the argument pretty quickly;
1) HIV is singled out despite laws already covering other infectious diseases. This would bring it in line with other diseases.
2) The science has changed. HIV is now a manageable chronic condition. If we go by the
NHS's information, treated HIV
does not reduce life expectancy. In the US it may be an expensive condition to manage, but calling it a death sentence is just wrong, based on information from the bad old days of the 80s and early 90s (the first effective treatments were in around '96). Treated HIV that has reached sufficiently low levels is a much minimal health risk to the carrier (mostly only a risk factor for other diseases) and is extremely unlikely to be transmitted, even through unprotected sex.
3) It creates a perverse incentive for people to avoid being tested if they engage in risky sex or sex work, as knowing exposes them to criminal charges. This makes them more likely to be untreated carriers, therefore more likely to spread it further while risking their own health and it developing further to AIDS.
The ACLU and others have more reasons, but I think those three points are the critical ones. 1 has the secondary effect of removing the discrimination inherent in criminal charges only existing for the disease associated with minorities.
Anyway.
This is incredible.Comey and Rogers answer a leading question from Nunes about the Russia allegations. Nunes asks about something no-one believes happened (direct interference in the vote counts) and forces a negative answer despite the NSA director hedging.
Trump then tweets the video saying it is a denial that there was any Russia interference in the "electoral process".
Rep. Jim Himes then reads the tweet to the FBI and NSA directors and asks if it is accurate. They are pretty much flabbergasted and have to work to avoid calling Trump a liar during the hearing.