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So a simple qualifier like "All I got" entitles you write the most vitriolic nonsense?
So we are all allowed to troll each other in the most vile ways possible as long as we preface that with some mostly rhethorical qualifier?
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Ok, so you set an upper limit before actual murder. What about ritualised mutilation? For example, what if someone possessed the sincere religious belief that after committing such-and-such sin, it was necessary to cut their child's hand off?OK... obviously not.
metatron said:So a simple qualifier like "All I got" entitles you write the most vitriolic nonsense?
So we are all allowed to troll each other in the most vile ways possible as long as we preface that with some mostly rhethorical qualifier?
In a "comparison" in the colloquial sense two things usually have to be alike in regard to more than one standard. Hence your scepticism.
None the less it is perfectly possible to make a comparison regarding only one standard.
It's perfectly possible for starters to compare apples and oranges as long as all you care about is that what you get is a fruit and somewhat sweet. In dietary considerations apples and oranges are being compared by cosmo-reading women as we speak...
Most medical associations have an official stance that circumcision has pros and cons and should be left up to the parents.
The American Urological Association recommend that "circumcision should be presented as an option for health benefits".
The American Academy of Family Physicians recommend that doctors "discuss the potential harms and benefits of circumcision with all parents or legal guardians considering this procedure for their newborn son.
The American Academy of Pediatrics states that "existing scientific evidence demonstrates potential medical benefits of newborn male circumcision; however, these data are not sufficient to recommend routine neonatal circumcision. In the case of circumcision, in which there are potential benefits and risks, yet the procedure is not essential to the child's current well-being, parents should determine what is in the best interest of the child." This statement is supported by the American Medical Association.
The story in the rest of the world is fairly similar, notable exceptions being the Royal Dutch Medical Association who come out firmly against circumcision and the WHO who recommend circumcision as a preventative measure for HIV.
That's about as mixed as medical opinion comes, which is why I say leave it up to the doctors and the parents.
Spurious may be the wrong word, but your claim is certainly incorrect in some ways and contentious in others. Skin as a whole is an organ which I guess would make the foreskin a bit of an organ. It is certainly not essential; I'm sure a number of people on CFC can attest to that.
As for the function of the foreskin, once again medical opinion is mixed.
The wikipedia article is actually pretty good; I recommend reading it and some of the reference papers if you want get to get a broad view of the medical research rather than just that which foreskin.org has identified as being in agreement with its agenda.
I've yet to observe that every Jewish man is walking around with PTSD
I don't particularly care about the reasons that parents have for having a child circumcised. The only thing I think that needs to be considered is whether or not the procedure is beneficial. If it is beneficial for an individual child then who cares why parents get it done?
There is no consensus on the medical benefits of circumcision, I think that alone explains the disparity in how widespread it is in different countries. Government A listens to study A while government B listens to study B.
I'll try to remember to PM you every time I post anything about a vagina so you can get your penis word in too.
Chill bro.
I do not respect any sort of "religious freedom" to abuse your children. I am not sympathetic to Jews that want to amputate their sons.
Get it?
I don't give a damn about religion.
I would propose something like legal immunity for medical professionals that actually perform the procedure to a set of standards, while anyone contracting those services would still be criminally liable. Contracting services from non-medical-professionals would be an even more severe crime, on both parties' parts.
The point is not to accommodate child abuse. The point is that some people are going to do it anyway, and any law that treats it the same under any circumstances increases harm.
That's not okay. It's not okay to subject any child to additional danger.
The point is to incentivize safety even under prohibition. Unless you'd propose the maximum possible punishment for hiring a doctor to perform the medically ideal circumcision, then there's room to incentivize safety.
Sex was pretty darned painful before my circumcision but post-op I've had no problem. I would recommend circumcision to anyone.
I read the thread. But all I could remember worth discussing was just how awful those examples were. I mean, it's like defending homosexuals on the grounds that the more of them there are, the closer the Rapture is and they are all to hell. The idea is good but the arguments used to defend it just aren't. Now, to use another example. I might agree with the aim of a thread to establish peace in the Middle East, but I'm not going to endorse it if that solution's methods include something minor like nuking Tel Aviv. (Hell in that case, I'd be forced to argue that the Israeli's would be justified in using their arsenal in a retaliatory strike, which would I assume end all hopes of peace).
The OP minimized torture, man; which is distasteful. Hence the comparison. The Godwin wasn't intentional. Using different examples till yields the same result. "The Herero Genocide wasn't all that important because 2.5 million Armenians died" for instance.
Saying all I got out of the entire thread was X, Y and Z is very different to saying all there was in the thread was X, Y and Z. And I'm afraid that X, Y and Z stuck because those were novel. I'm also kind of sure (and this might be wrong) that Cami had made all of those points in the previous thread. If he didn't, throw that into the mix of new things I took notice of.
Moreover, I never said that people criticizing 'male infant circumcision' are the same as Holocaust deniers. I did make the point that the OP was in effect trivializing torture and female genital mutilation and likened that form of argument to another common case of trivialization. I could have used different examples but I figured I'd just go with one I've seen in operation numerous times in OT and WT.
You seem to be suggesting that I shouldn't have called someone out trivializing female genital mutilation and torture?
You've just straw-manned me the whole way through that post.
Yeah, it is. Mine never ends.
How is it trolling to point out when the OP is minimizing significant and sensitive issues in service to something he alone seems to have an irrational hang-up over? (The whole circumcision as torture thing is as you've acknowledged problematic and unique to the OP).
All I got out of this whole thread was something to the effect of "female genital mutilation is the same as circumcision" which is on the same intellectual level as Holocaust minimization (2.5 million Armenians died) in terms of own goal forms of argumentation. People are forgiven for ignoring these threads on those grounds alone. I certainly did.
Ok, so you set an upper limit before actual murder. What about ritualised mutilation? For example, what if someone possessed the sincere religious belief that after committing such-and-such sin, it was necessary to cut their child's hand off?
Actual, substantial negative effect. Circumcision may have some minor negative effects, but it also has health benefits so it seems to balance out. That's different than cutting off a hand, which greatly restricts ones' life and has no benefits.
Can I assume you're simply trying to get me to define my position, rather than actually saying circumcision = cutting off a hand?
I guess so, but by no means must this step be followed by further steps towards such an end.Not recognizing the sacred nature of religious liberty is the first step to persecution (Of ANY religion.)
So you would have no particular objection to me walking up to you and giving your a sharp slap across the face, because it won't have any "substantial negative effects"?Actual, substantial negative effect. Circumcision may have some minor negative effects, but it also has health benefits so it seems to balance out. That's different than cutting off a hand, which greatly restricts ones' life and has no benefits.
Yeah, I'm not suggesting any direct equivalence, I'm just wondering chopping hacking one bit of somebody's body off without their consent is cool, and not another bit.Can I assume you're simply trying to get me to define my position, rather than actually saying circumcision = cutting off a hand?
So you would have no particular objection to me walking up to you and giving your a sharp slap across the face, because it won't have any "substantial negative effects"?
Yeah, I'm not suggesting any direct equivalence, I'm just wondering chopping hacking one bit of somebody's body off without their consent is cool, and not another bit.
I don't mean to a child or for discipline, I mean to you, and just because it seems like a good idea to me at the time.I'd have no problem with you doing so to a chiuld as a form of discipline...
So if a person is right-handed, it's less immoral to cut off the left-hand than the right? Bizarre as that distinction sounds, it does seem to be implicit in your logic.One bit is substantially more useful than the other...
Why? People were okay with all sorts of heinous crap for centuries. Just look at the slave trade. Popularity isn't any indication of anything.Also, I know we talk about "If a religion did this" but there's a difference between a theoretical religion doing something, and a religion that has millions, if not tens of millions, of followers doing it.
Not saying more people = more OK, but I don't see circumcision being as accepted as it is if it were actually awful.
I don't mean to a child or for discipline, I mean to you, and just because it seems like a good idea to me at the time.
So if a person is right-handed, it's less immoral to cut off the left-hand than the right? Bizarre as that distinction sounds, it does seem to be implicit in your logic.
Why? People were okay with all sorts of heinous crap for centuries. Just look at the slave trade. Popularity isn't any indication of anything.
Well, I don't think I should be able to just circumcise you either... my child is a bit different.
It isn't different because you do not own your hypothetical child's penis/genitals, therefore you have no right to make a decision that will permanently affect them.
Honestly, I bet within that kid's lifetime we'll have a way to fix that![]()
Besides the fact, you are deliberately ignoring the fairly moderate effect of not having a foreskin, and the possible benefits.
Completely ignoring.
Honestly, while I endorse it being fully legal, I'm not sure how I feel about it myself. Would I do it on my kid? I don't know. I don't know the facts 100%. But I don't have a religious obligation to do it either. I'm a Christian in the New Covenant. Circumcision isn't commanded anymore. If it were, I'd do it in a heartbeat, regardless of the law.
Religious freedom is - technically - a quit superfluous freedom. All you generally do in a religion can be conveniently covered by other freedoms and those things that aren't covered usually are neither by religious freedom.
Yet, historic reasons have brought forth a unique kind of freedom to protect religions and instinctively people rightfully assume a special kind of freedom which hides behind this "sacred" right. No wonder generations later after the fact people get confused when not really finding anything. Other than maybe circumcision that is. Shall freedom of religion serve a sacred and unique purpose after all?
Yep, Austria, we had a thread on it.Yes, it's true that religious freedom still enjoys a special status that it should not need. And that often gets exposed and ridiculed when someone decided to make up a new religion just to get some special exemption: I think there was a guy somewhere who made up one with the single rule of having to wear a saucer pan on his head, just to get the privilege of having his head covered on an id photo ?
All I got out of this whole thread was something to the effect of "female genital mutilation is the same as circumcision" which is on the same intellectual level as Holocaust minimization (2.5 million Armenians died) in terms of own goal forms of argumentation. People are forgiven for ignoring these threads on those grounds alone. I certainly did.