From the transcript:
CALLER: Well, it stands to reason that if birth control is the preferred — as compared to condoms and foam, which reduce sexually transmitted diseases — that if you pay for birth control, and it becomes a national health care as compared to individual health care, then as a nation don’t we have a right to reduce disease and have a public listing of those people that could be carriers?
RUSH: No. Eileen, it is incumbent upon individuals to assume responsibility for themselves. Now, you’re a smart woman. I can tell you’re a smart woman. I don’t know how you’ve been educated, but you’re smarter than this. There are national challenges on everything, and a lot of people derive from the fact that people are no longer assuming responsibility for their own actions — and, in fact, want there to be no consequences for them or to them. And that’s one of the things that’s wrong here. Look, I don’t care. If this woman wants to have sex ten times a day for three years, fine and dandy. If she wants no consequences, let her take the steps necessary. I shouldn’t have to be, and nobody else should have to be, responsible for her and guarantee her a life of no responsibility or no consequence whatsoever.
Dear Caller, perhaps you should try that on the gay and HIV community. I'm sure they would agree with you. NOT.
Go ahead just try it and see the reaction you get, you'll be lucky if it's only a bomb and not some HIV infected person trying to bite you on the leg.
Good luck Caller.