Posted on 04/05/2006 5:19:29 PM PDT by Giant Conservative
The debate about neonatal circumcision is over. According to the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP), neonatal circumcision is the result of ignorance, bad medical practice and American social and cultural pressure. Regarding the three most commonly cited justifications for neonatal circumcision (penile cancer, venereal disease and penile hygiene), the AAP now states that the benefits are negligible, which means that the majority of American men are walking around without foreskins for no good reason. Yet, the barbaric practice shows no sign of abating, and for this reason I plan to shed some light on the cultural dark spot of circumcision.
The U.S. stands alone as the only country in the world (including developed, developing and undeveloped countries) where neonatal nonreligious circumcision is routine for physicians and their unwitting patients.
In contrast, 80 percent of the planet does not practice circumcision, and since 1870 no other country has adopted it. China, Japan, Belgium, France, Germany, Switzerland, Austria, Scandinavia, Holland and Russia have never condoned the practice (except for religious purposes), and of the other countries that do practice neonatal nonreligious circumcision (Canada, Australia and Great Britain), there has been a regimented decline in circumcisions by about 10 percent per decade in accordance with the advice of each countrys own respective medical institutions.
If we take a look at the latter group of English-speaking countries, the statistics show just how wildly disproportionate the U.S. endemic is when compared with its English speaking cousins. In the second-highest-instance countries, Australia and Canada, the amount of neonatal nonreligious circumcisions is estimated to be about 30 percent, compared to Great Britain where only 1 percent of males can expect to have their foreskins cut off before they have even acquired one-word language acquisition to be able to say No!. In the U.S., however, the number of circumcised males is estimated to be approximately 80 percent. Only in America has medical science taken a back seat in the fight for the foreskin.
As Edward Wallerstein aptly points out in Circumcision: The Uniquely American Medical Enigma, [i]n 1971 and 1975, the American Academy of Pediatrics Task Force on Circumcision declared: there are no valid medical indications for circumcision in the neonatal period. Subsequently, this decision has been endorsed by The American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists in 1978 and by the AAP in 1999.
And yet, Wallerstein highlights that [t]he firm declarations should have caused a marked drop in the United States circumcision rate. They did not. The truth is that neonatal circumcision is deeply rooted in American culture: so much so, in fact, that many American parents actually believe they are doing their sons a service, when, in only one foul slice, the dangers of penile cancer, venereal disease and bad hygiene are purportedly quashed (along with premature ejaculation, masturbation, and general ugliness). But American parents have been grossly misguided.
The AAP affirms that the majority of reported benefits by which parents justify circumcision are groundless hearsay. Notably, penile cancer might be preventable through circumcision of the foreskin, just as the potential for most diseases is eliminable by the complete removal of the vulnerable body part I bet I could guarantee you would never contract Hotchkiss brain disease if you let me cut your head off too but the fact is that the foreskin is an important, healthy and irreplaceable part of a childs body, and in the absence of overwhelming medical evidence proving the link between retention of the foreskin and penile cancer, the AAP has had no choice but to disregard this cultural claim.
Furthermore, as far as the argument that circumcision reduces the risk of contracting venereal diseases goes, Wallerstein crucially highlights that health circumcision originated in 19th century England, where the theory emerged that masturbation was responsible for such things as asthma, hernia, gout, kidney disease, rheumatism and even alcoholism.
The Victorian aversion to all acts sexual was fertile ground for genital mutilation to take root and, since the English cultural practice stormed the U.S., beliefs about the purported benefits of the practice have barely changed, while Great Britain has become a born-again circumcision virgin. Consequently, the link proposed between any disease and the foreskin is outdated fallacy including venereal diseases.
As if that was not enough, the AAP also states that there is little evidence to affirm the association between circumcision status and optimal penile hygiene. Consequently, parental supervision of the foreskin is a far more appropriate measure for reducing the chances of infection in a boys penis than a radical surgical procedure, especially when the short-term effects of circumcision can include anything from changed sleeping patterns to psychological disruptions in feeding and bonding between mother and infant, profuse bleeding, subsequent infection from surgery, and even death.
Moreover, the AAP recognizes that circumcision causes extreme pain and trauma for infants, since circumcised infants exhibit deterioration in pain threshold as much as six months later when receiving mandatory vaccinations, while the long-term physical and psychological damage is undocumented.
In short, the idea that neonatal circumcision is the answer to all of mens ills is erroneous. Like the Jewish religious practice of circumcision, American nonreligious circumcision is dependent on the acceptance of cultural beliefs, and the sad truth is that Americans hold to the norm as tenaciously as they hold to the scalpel, although they do not entirely know why because they are not being told.
Religious circumcision is one thing, but circumcision for no good reason ... well, what is the sense of that? There is none! Removal of the foreskin is a cultural mistake, and I hope that on reading these facts you will break the ghastly cycle if the choice ever becomes your own. Its about time the foreskin became sacred too.
The Muslims circumcize males babies. Unfortunately, some do it to females is well, which really is barbaric genital mutilation.
I was so traumatized by circumcision I kept pulling on it every chance I got for 2 decades.
I scared them, they acted out of fear
working with developmentally disabled men in personal hygiene is a whole lot easier when the men have had a circumcision.
Circumcision Benefits Seen For the first time
http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=950DE4DF143CF935A35750C0A96F948260
Circumcision Benefits Seen For the first time, the American Academy of Pediatrics said circumcision protects against kidney and urinary tract infections.
Medical Benefits Of Circumcision
http://www.drjesin.com/medicalbenAJ.html
Indeed. I am, as will my boys.
I know personally 3 men who were "cut" at some point after their late 20s, all had trauma that required it to go. Two were sports related(a cup that caught it and damaged). The other guy nearly lost it all when a retaining bolt on a metal press arm let loose and got him on the left leg and crotch. To a man they claim it isn't as good. I have no frame of reference. I would have preferred a choice.
Would you care to explain that procedure?
It's all about reading comprehension:
"The U.S. stands alone as the only country in the world (including developed, developing and undeveloped countries) where neonatal nonreligious circumcision is routine for physicians and their unwitting patients"
(2) Smegma.
circumcision is the civilized thing to do.
misc ping
Be sure to cc: God on that memo.
Where? The UN website says
UN agencies are calling for caution in response to findings that circumcision could be effective in reducing the risk of HIV infection among men.Those findings were presented yesterday at an AIDS conference in Brazil. The Joint UN Programme on HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS) in collaboration with the World Health Organization, the UN Population Fund and the UN Childrens Fund says that more research is needed, and that even if the findings are confirmed, it will not mean that men will be able to prevent HIV infection through circumcision alone.
Trust me, I have been accused of misogyny more than most people have. If I really thought there was a problem with circumcision, I would probably see it. But it's all good, IMO.
hehehehe...
You just can't lurk, can you? ;-)
Oh! I mean...ummm...I'm not really here...
I was so traumatized, I couldn't talk for a year, people tell me it was just gibberish.
So your saying beauty is only skin deep?
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