For a good part of our history, circumcision has been a process that we performed without much thought. It was a suggested process for cleanliness and health reasons, but without much scientific backing. In the 1960s a trend began where parents did not circumcise their male children, and
according to this article nearly half of male children born in the US are not circumcised. The anti-circumcision group drew from the Center for Disease Control's neutrality on the subject. Due to some recent findings, that neutrality has changed to leaning towards circumcision again, as a way to improve overall health and in particular sexually transmitted diseases.
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the American Academy of Pediatrics, currently neutral on whether to circumcise, are drafting new policies in light of recent studies suggesting circumcision helps prevent transmission of HIV and other sexually transmitted diseases.
The studies driving the new recommendations, based on clinical trials in sub-Saharan Africa and published in recent years in the Lancet medical journal, found that circumcised men had a 60 percent lower incidence of contracting HIV from heterosexual sex than their uncircumcised peers.
Another study, published in January in the Lancet, found that women with circumcised partners were 28 percent less likely to contract the human papillomavirus (HPV), a common STD that can cause cervical cancer, than women with uncircumcised partners.
The article does a good job of explaining both sides of the argument. Both sides agree on the most important thing: this shouldn't be done without research and consideration. It's up to the parents to decide whether or not to circumcise their children, but to do it without any reason beyond "I want him to match his father" isn't making a solid choice.
Parents should allow their infant boys to decide for themselves when they grow up. That eliminates the infant trauma, and not many preteens are vulnerable to STDs.
ReplyDeleteHere's my question for Bon The Geek:
ReplyDeleteWhy?
Why do you tolerate hanging around a failure of a blog like this one? You have to see how on a daily basis Steve AR or myself rip apart Zandar's poorly sourced propaganda and college dropout logic arguments.
You fancy yourself as a professional writer. Do you think anyone is going to look at your posts on this blog as a positive in any way?
The best thing you could do for both Zandar and yourself is to convince him to shut this embarrassment of a blog down. Being associated with this disaster will only hurt your chances in life. He's not going anywhere with this in his life. Nobody's going to pay him to blog, he's not going to earn fame or accolades, at best he's considered a colossal joke, just another shitty leftist propaganda blog among thousands.
If you quit, he'd listen to you.
Do the both of you a favor and talk him into shutting the blog down.
You don't want this disaster hanging around your neck with your writing career. Trust me.
Aww, look at that. The Incredble Credibility Problem is just so very very concerned, in between its' screeches about how the FBI's SO totally going to come and take Zandar away for being a hate blogger.
ReplyDeleteSeriously. Can you see the concern oozing from ICP? It's all so very, very concerned. Not slime at all.