a "BBFS Hater". I have gone bare with more than my share of Kgirls over the years, but I don't see girls who advertise BBFS publicly on their web ads. When BBFS was YMMV and UTR, a girl had the right to refuse bareback on a case by case basis if she thought there was any risk involved with a particular customer, but when she advertises it on her regular menu, she really can't say no without some blowback in the form of a bad review. There is only one agency I have seen lately where they say specifically that a girl still has the right to change her mind about bareback even after you get there. I would be more inclined to take my chances with girls who still retain the right of refusal if something looks or seems suspicious about a particular customer thnt girls who welcome all comers (or all cummers). Lol
As far as the drug-resistant gonorrhea, I lifted this quote from your link . . . . .
"Over time, the bacteria that cause gonorrhea have been able to develop resistance to many antibiotics, meaning that many medicines that used to cure the infection no longer work. This makes gonorrhea a major public health problem."
California Health Line recently published this on the increase in drug-resistent gonorrhea . . . .
"Drug-resistant strains of the sexually transmitted disease gonorrhea are on the rise in California and other parts of the West Coast, forcing health officials to reconsider current treatment recommendations, the Los Angeles Times reports (Ornstein, Los Angeles Times, 3/5). Cipro and other fluoroquinolone antibiotics have been "top-line" treatments for gonorrhea since the 1980s, when the disease became resistant to tetracycline (Chase, Wall Street Journal, 3/5). However, health officials have noted a recent increase in the number of gonorrhea infections that are resistant to fluoroquinolone antibiotics. Fluoroquinolone-resistant gonorrhea accounted for 4% of gonorrhea cases studied in Southern California in the last six months of 2001 (Los Angeles Times, 3/5). On the West Coast, the proportion of gonorrhea cases that are resistant to Cipro has increased from 0.1% in 1998 to 0.4% in 2000, and Cipro-resistant gonorrhea has been reported in Seattle, San Francisco, San Diego and Orange County (Wall Street Journal, 3/5). Drug-resistant gonorrhea is most common in homosexual and bisexual men and people who have had sexual partners from Asia, where the resistance is more widespread. Doctors and health officials are concerned that the rise of drug-resistant gonorrhea will decrease the number of treatment options available for the disease. To fight drug resistance, health officials in San Francisco and San Diego have advised physicians to avoid treating gonorrhea with Cipro and other fluoroquinolones, suggesting instead that they use cephalosporins, a class of antibiotics proven to treat the disease without producing drug resistance. During the National STD Prevention Conference in San Diego this week, officials from California will discuss whether to rewrite treatment recommendations for all doctors in the state (Los Angeles Times, 3/5)."
As is shown here, the percentage of gonorrhea cases that are drug-resistant is ten times what it was in the year 2000. If you think the cases are still only in Massachusetts (that was January, this is NOW), you should do a little more research.