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The girls from the most notable families in the land were at every party, and despite all those 1980s fears about AIDS and dying of ignorance in a cesspit of your own making, people weren't anywhere near as restrained as they were told they should be.
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"Don't die of ignorance", intoned a grim voice.
It was all, 'Don't die of ignorance.' My nan thought being gay was a disease.
Back in the 1980s, the message was "Don't die of ignorance".
In 1986, a generation was scared witless by the "don't die of ignorance" Aids campaign.
One exhibit on display is a leaflet, posted through UK doors in 1989, titled "Aids: Don't Die of Ignorance".
A series of leaflets and television adverts, famously showing a tombstone etched with the words "Don't die of ignorance", nonetheless followed.
Some, such as Britain's "Don't Die of Ignorance" campaign against HIV/AIDS in the late 1980s, took their moribund tone from horror films.
The fear is a legacy of the uncertainty of the 1980s and those terrifying adverts that told us, "Aids: Don't die of ignorance".
My parents' generation lived through the public-health campaigns of the 1980s, which put tombstones on television screens and leaflets proclaiming "Don't die of ignorance" through the nation's letterboxes.
The infamous TV advert released in the 1980s which warned of "danger that is a threat to us all" and told people not to "die of ignorance" is often cited as one of many damaging approaches to tackling the virus.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com