I doubt it prevents transmission. But since [HIV doesn't cause AIDS anyway](https://www.amazon.com/Serious-Adverse-Events-Uncensored-History/dp/1645022072), when people get this treatment and then don't get sick, it's proof that it "works" and they therefore need to take it for life, making the drug manufacturers billions.
I commented similarly but then asked AI, which said:
> HIV treatment, specifically antiretroviral therapy (ART), can significantly reduce the risk of transmitting HIV through blood, particularly when the viral load is suppressed to undetectable levels. When a person with HIV takes ART as prescribed, the viral load—the amount of HIV in the blood—can be reduced to levels that are undetectable with standard laboratory tests, typically defined as fewer than 200 copies of HIV per milliliter of blood. At this stage, the risk of transmitting HIV through blood is effectively zero.
Still sounds experimental and also dangerous like, say they're out in the battlefield and lose their meds and become "viral" again, you're just putting people at risk who would have to tend to you if you get wounded...
The nation is run by faggots. Who would want to defend them?
Remember. White police officers primarily protect and serve the corrupt government institution. In the apocalypse they will be protecting and serving corrupt politicians, not your residence. That's what makes them ZOGbots. They claim they protect and serve YOU but they circle the government wagons when the people want their government officials hung/impaled.
\> living with HIV on treatment - meaning they cannot pass the virus on
I thought... you could transmit the virus while on treatment?
So it's not "discriminatory" to bar HIV+ people from the military so much as a safety issue if they get injured and people have to tend to their hazardous blood
> HIV treatment, specifically antiretroviral therapy (ART), can significantly reduce the risk of transmitting HIV through blood, particularly when the viral load is suppressed to undetectable levels. When a person with HIV takes ART as prescribed, the viral load—the amount of HIV in the blood—can be reduced to levels that are undetectable with standard laboratory tests, typically defined as fewer than 200 copies of HIV per milliliter of blood. At this stage, the risk of transmitting HIV through blood is effectively zero.
Still sounds experimental and also dangerous like, say they're out in the battlefield and lose their meds and become "viral" again, you're just putting people at risk who would have to tend to you if you get wounded...