Is Circumcision Another Form of Genital
Mutilation?
Tim King Salem-News.com
Legislation could change the future of American
males.
(SAN DIEGO, Calif.) - Circumcision is flying to the
front of medical and political arguments as Americans
face the idea that we as a society may be gravely in
error in our choice to allow doctors to complete
circumcisions of young boys, particularly those just
born which is the common approach in most cases.
Experts on both sides of the argument are esteemed
researchers, but a closer look at what circumcision
really brings us; campaigns for Viagra and a lack of
sexual satisfaction in men, shows that it may be among
our worst and most cruel cultural practices.
Talk about a subject that takes people out of their
comfort zone. It is hard to learn that your life is not
what it was really meant to be, that everything about
our sexual lives is impacted by the fact that part of
us was cut off and tossed when we were infants, without
a voice to complain.
Now the movement is stepping forward with legislation
that would curb or end the practice in our hospitals.
The MGM Bill to End Male Genital Mutilation in the U.S.
could change the way our society treats its young
boys.
"The legislation that we are proposing would give boys
the same protection from genital cutting that girls
have enjoyed since 1997," said Matthew Hess, the
group’s president. "Circumcision removes
erogenous tissue in both sexes and results in a
measurable loss of sexual feeling. It is a traumatic
and disfiguring surgery that should not be performed on
children unless there is a clear, compelling, and
immediate medical need – period."
Hess says genital cutting of girls has been prohibited
in the U.S. since 1997 when the Female Genital
Mutilation Act took effect, requiring women to be
eighteen years old before consenting to any type of
genital surgery. The law has been credited with helping
to keep forced female circumcision from spreading to
the U.S. from Africa and the Middle East, where it is
much more common.
Boys were not included in the law, however, and as a
result circumcision is still performed on nearly 60% of
U.S. newborn males by physicians, religious
practitioners, or family members.
A Frankfurt, Germany, regional appeals court pushed
circumcision further into the legal gray area recently
when it found that the circumcision of an 11-year-old
Muslim boy without his approval was an unlawful
personal injury. And in November, the Oregon Supreme
Court heard a case filed by the mother of a 12-year-old
boy trying to protect him from being circumcised by his
father for religious reasons. (Oregon Courts Have No
Right to Force Circumcision) The court’s decision
on the Oregon case is pending.
Anti-circumcision advocates say the latest blow comes
from a Johns Hopkins University report that suggests
men who are circumcised are at less risk of contracting
the AID's virus. People who have studied the subject
for years, like Marylin Milos in San Francisco with the
National Organization of Circumcision Information
Resource Centers, call the information into question
and believe it is a death sentence for many.
"People aren't going to stop getting AID's because
they're circumcised. This gives false hope and it isn't
responsible information for medical professionals to be
putting out there."
It does seem like an overly optimistic thought to
suggest that a man could have unprotected sex with a
person who has AID's without protection and somehow
avoid getting sick because his foreskin is
removed.
The conservative press group Voices of America
published the article about circumcision and AID's
yesterday, this is the opening paragraph:
"Epidemiologist Ronald Gray from the Johns Hopkins
School of Public Health led the original studies
looking at circumcision and HIV risk. In order to
convince skeptical men, he says they needed to know if
men would be willing to be circumcised and what it
would do to sexual performance and
satisfaction."
Perhaps the word "convince" says it all.
Doctors make money from circumcising young male
children.
If you jump past the Biblical origination of the story
and flash forward about 1850 years, you learn that
Jewish people were actually scorned for their
circumcisions in most western societies. But then a
belief developed in England that circumcising boys
would reduce masturbation. That is all it took, along
with the money the practice represents for European and
American doctors and hospitals.
Marylin Milos cites other developments over the years
including locker room phobia, largely eliminated now as
most west coast states are shying away from forcing
young students to disrobe in front of one
another.
This practice according to Milos, reduces the feeling
that men experience during sex. That diminished quality
has lifetime implications. She says it is that
diminished feeling that leads to men seeking cures for
erectile dysfunction.
She says pro-circumcision advocates also released
through medical journals decades ago, a connection
between uncircumcised men and penile cancer, which was
proven to be false information. Instead, she says that
in the case of many circumcised men who contract penile
cancer, it begins at their circumcision scar.
This is a subject just gaining momentum in this
country and it isn't likely to lose steam as parents
and others become increasingly aware of a number of
problems associated with the practice. The online
dictionary Wikipedia clearly defines the practice of
circumcision as mutilation.
Wikipedia states, "Mutilation is an act or physical
injury that degrades the appearance or function of the
(human) body, usually without causing death."
Circumcision is listed alongside burning and
amputation, as a form of mutilation or maiming.
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