Question for the men in this thread who feel that the right of an infant to an intact foreskin trumps parents' rights to make a decision they feel may be medically beneficial, as well as doctors' rights to recommend a procedure they feel is medically beneficial:
Would you feel the same way if, say, we were all born with a funny-looking flap of skin on our earlobes? If some parents had it removed at birth, either for religious or aesthetic reasons? Let's say removing it reduces the risk of serious ear infections leading to hearing loss very slightly. Let's also say, to be fair to your side, that its removal in adults causes some very minor loss of hearing, but that babies whose earflaps were removed at birth grow up to report no perceived problems with their hearing. The procedure to remove it is almost painless. In some parts of the world leaving it intact is the norm; in America, it's normal to remove it.
Let me ask you for a moment to forget that we're on opposite sides here and just consider my question. Would you feel so strongly about prohibiting snipping away the extra earlobe flap, or any similar flap of skin anywhere on the body besides the penis?
How strongly some men feel about this just reeks to me of the same leg-crossing, crotch-shielding protectiveness that makes some men refuse to neuter their dogs despite clear evidence of health benefits, behavior improvements, and the obvious benefit of sterilization. As soon as something threatens the male reproductive organs, some men become deaf to anything but their own desire to protect their penises.
Slytovhand, I think the inalienable rights of infants are the right to life if delivered alive, the right to a safe home where they are fed and sheltered, and the right not to be beaten or otherwise abused. I don't think they have a right to make their own medical decisions. If they did, there would be a lot of doctors wondering how to act on the decision, "Goo." The rest of the rights of an adult human being vest over time as a child grows to be capable of understanding these rights-- like the right to own property or to speak its mind freely or to vote.
If you both can honestly say you would in fact also support a ban on the removal of imaginary earflaps, I think you're silly, but congrats, you're not hypocrites. But once we start saying that one cultural choice (intact foreskin) is better than another in this realm, we set a dangerous precedent of government interference in personal parental choices. What about Hispanic culture, where piercing baby girls' ears is normal? Or children born with vestigal sixth fingers, like Gemma Argent? Would she then be forced to undergo surgery as an adult and cope with increased pain and danger, instead of having had her parents step in and decide to have these little finger-stubs removed when she was an infant? Or people (like me) born with narrowed nasal passages-- would parents no longer be able to decide whether or not to send their child for surgery to expand narrow nasal passages? My parents decided against it, and I just happen to have a shitty singing voice and more frequent congestion than most people, but some kids with the same problem grow up to have frequent sinus infections. What about braces, for cosmetic reasons only, to which a child objects? Can a parent make THAT decision for their child?
I don't want kids, but if I did have them, I'd sure as heck want the government to stay out of all the decisions in the last paragraph.
Would you feel the same way if, say, we were all born with a funny-looking flap of skin on our earlobes? If some parents had it removed at birth, either for religious or aesthetic reasons? Let's say removing it reduces the risk of serious ear infections leading to hearing loss very slightly. Let's also say, to be fair to your side, that its removal in adults causes some very minor loss of hearing, but that babies whose earflaps were removed at birth grow up to report no perceived problems with their hearing. The procedure to remove it is almost painless. In some parts of the world leaving it intact is the norm; in America, it's normal to remove it.
Let me ask you for a moment to forget that we're on opposite sides here and just consider my question. Would you feel so strongly about prohibiting snipping away the extra earlobe flap, or any similar flap of skin anywhere on the body besides the penis?
How strongly some men feel about this just reeks to me of the same leg-crossing, crotch-shielding protectiveness that makes some men refuse to neuter their dogs despite clear evidence of health benefits, behavior improvements, and the obvious benefit of sterilization. As soon as something threatens the male reproductive organs, some men become deaf to anything but their own desire to protect their penises.
Slytovhand, I think the inalienable rights of infants are the right to life if delivered alive, the right to a safe home where they are fed and sheltered, and the right not to be beaten or otherwise abused. I don't think they have a right to make their own medical decisions. If they did, there would be a lot of doctors wondering how to act on the decision, "Goo." The rest of the rights of an adult human being vest over time as a child grows to be capable of understanding these rights-- like the right to own property or to speak its mind freely or to vote.
If you both can honestly say you would in fact also support a ban on the removal of imaginary earflaps, I think you're silly, but congrats, you're not hypocrites. But once we start saying that one cultural choice (intact foreskin) is better than another in this realm, we set a dangerous precedent of government interference in personal parental choices. What about Hispanic culture, where piercing baby girls' ears is normal? Or children born with vestigal sixth fingers, like Gemma Argent? Would she then be forced to undergo surgery as an adult and cope with increased pain and danger, instead of having had her parents step in and decide to have these little finger-stubs removed when she was an infant? Or people (like me) born with narrowed nasal passages-- would parents no longer be able to decide whether or not to send their child for surgery to expand narrow nasal passages? My parents decided against it, and I just happen to have a shitty singing voice and more frequent congestion than most people, but some kids with the same problem grow up to have frequent sinus infections. What about braces, for cosmetic reasons only, to which a child objects? Can a parent make THAT decision for their child?
I don't want kids, but if I did have them, I'd sure as heck want the government to stay out of all the decisions in the last paragraph.
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