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Re: Baby dies after home circumcision
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Nevertheless, it is right for parents to make those decisions for their sons because they are the parents. The only alternative that I can see - the State - has ramifications that leave me deeply uncomfortable. On the subject of female circumcision, it is expressly forbidden in Judaism and in Islam is variously discouraged if not outright condemned depending on which expression of that religion you look to. I see no logical requirement for the allowance of male circumcision to therefore excuse female circumcision, the chopping off of middle fingers or human sacrifice. To suggest that the one mandates the rest is absurd and somewhat pointless. Rather than asking what must be permitted in the name of religion, it is a lot more useful to look at what religions actually require in the UK and take it from there. Quote:
You're almost certainly right, if we lived in a sterile society where only what is scientifically valid and medically necessary may be done, then someone attempting to start a religious practice like circumcision would most likely be prevented from doing so. If circumcision were an absolute requirement of that religion, then the religion would either die out or go underground. Christianity went underground, literally, in 1st century Rome. Today, the version of Roman society that ruled Christian beliefs illegal has gone, and from a certain point of view Christianity has made Rome its capital city. The reason I mention all this is to reinforce the point I made earlier. You're attempting to set your own very specific, early 21st century secular Western cultural mores against a practice that has survived around the world for millennia. When you say, "I do think it's right people think about what it means for a parent to decide it's alright to remove part of a boy's anatomy," set against all the countless millions of people who have happily circumcised their boys as part of their religion, even under persecution, your demand for them to see things in your own terms, which are so narrow in both time and in culture, is just a bit small-minded. ---------- Post added at 19:25 ---------- Previous post was at 19:22 ---------- Quote:
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Re: Baby dies after home circumcision
I am finding it hard to really connect to any of the religion arguments being made in it's favour, probably not a surprise as am I an atheist. However, I can't get past the notion that it involves making an irrevocable mutilation to a child who cannot consent and will live like that for the rest of their lives, regardless of any later decision they take regarding their faith.
I don't think it's especially oppressive to say that it's not allowed without the adult consent of the person being operated on. ---------- Post added at 19:43 ---------- Previous post was at 19:35 ---------- Quote:
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Furthermore, you're trying to hide your prejudice behind reasonable-sounding arguments about adult consent. Perjorative words and phrases like 'mutilation' and 'live like that for the rest of their lives' are a gross misrepresentation of what a male circumcision is. If removal of the foreskin is in any absolute sense a 'mutilation' of the body, then it would be mutilation even if it were carried out for medical reasons. Yet nobody, but nobody, refers to it in those terms. The physical appearance is barely more dramatic than a post-operative scar. |
Re: Baby dies after home circumcision
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I'd be interested, seeing you suggested that not all rituals are acceptable, what you would suggest as a set of rules to determine if a ritual involving children is or is not acceptable. I'd be very surprised if this list did not involve some notion of harming a child. What's more: I'd be very surprised if many of the rituals that would be banned would be covered by existing legislation (i.e. banned by the state). I think the only way in which you could conceivably justify allowing circumcision is on the basis of it being a long-established practice. Frankly, I'd say, that is a very thin reason. |
Re: Baby dies after home circumcision
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There is no medical reason to ban male circumcision; you yourself have formed an argument that is essentially moral in nature (the question of whether parents should decide such things for their children), yet when you talk of what 'should survive' it's difficult to see how you could determine what survives without resorting to legislation. And legislating for or against religious or moral observance is a very, very tricky road to go down. |
Re: Baby dies after home circumcision
Out of interest: whether you believe in Evolution or Intelligent Design, presumably there is a reason why men have foreskin, and presumably both chance and the watchmaker would frown upon removing it?
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As a matter of fact, I've not even made the argument 'it must be alright because it's survived' - what I've suggested is that it shows a crushing lack of perspective on your part to hope that millions of people down countless centuries would have behaved differently had they only chosen to think about things in your terms. That said, what I do believe is that, while longevity does not automatically equate to rightness, longevity is most certainly a factor to be taken very seriously into consideration if you want to quite suddenly declare 'wrong' something which a lot of people have always considered 'right'. ---------- Post added at 20:03 ---------- Previous post was at 20:01 ---------- Quote:
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There are some of these conflicts already, we don't allow some of the practises that seem more common place in countries where Sharia law is more prevalent. No one here would argue we should allow the stoning of women for adultery or that a man possesses a woman (Although, I am unsure of how much of that is actually rooted in the Islamic Faith and how much of it is more about a culture.) So we already have a notion that someone's rights don't extend to their right to impose their belief on a another individual. So we're back to the central question, Does the parent have the right to make this decision for their child? My view is that as it's not medically necessary and is a permanent change to their body then maybe not. |
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no just helpless babies |
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