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Reminds me of the Burka debates. Its a mixture of so many touchy issues, gets the heat up, but hardly the most important abuse these days. I would recommend to first stop killing people, selling them, torturing them, enslaving them etc., one of the next steps is to deal with all those fancy rituals
I fail to see how the psychological, somatic or sexual repercussions of genital mutilation could be much different for boys than for girls.
Canadian_watcher wrote:
edit: Who is to say that the damage done by subjecting infant boys to trauma so early in their lives (or a little later in life in certain countries) isn't part of the root cause of the 'more important abuses' you refer to above?
RocketMan wrote:The current view is, again according to my understanding, that female genital mutilation is a patriarchal institution whose intent is to control the ever-scary female sexuality whereas with males... what? Anyone?
hava1 wrote:Canadian_watcher wrote:
edit: Who is to say that the damage done by subjecting infant boys to trauma so early in their lives (or a little later in life in certain countries) isn't part of the root cause of the 'more important abuses' you refer to above?
That would require data,
Goldman (1997) suggests that men who were neonatally circumcised would be more likely to suffer from low self-esteem, to avoid intimacy in male-female relationships, and a higher incidence of divorce. Moreover, he says neonatal circumcision may cause a higher incidence of unnecessary surgery, and of adult violence, including suicide, rape, and murder. 1
Baker (1996) argues that men harbor rage toward their mothers for their circumcision. She also identifies a connection between sexual violence, rape, and neonatal circumcision. 2
DeMause (1996) connects perinatal circumcision trauma with increases in teenage suicide and social violence. 3
1-Goldman R. Circumcision: The Hidden Trauma. Boston: Vanguard Publications, 1997: pp. 139–75.
2-Baker JP. Ending circumcision: where sex and violence first meet. Primal Renaissance: The Journal of Primal Psychology 1996;2(1):54–8.
3-deMause L. Restaging fetal traumas in war and social violence. Pre- & Perinatal Psychology Journal 1996;10(4):227–58
hava1 wrote:There's a difference bn male/female circumcision, that in case of females it takes away some of the fun, i think for men, if done properly, it does not transform basic functions. But again, information is kind of unclear.
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