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07-12-12, 08:20 PM #241
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07-12-12, 08:50 PM #242
Sorry but i really have to ask Why would anyone use Vaseline as a lubricant? It's not lubricating. There are water based and even silicon based sold in supermarkets so why would you use that?????? Even massage oil would be better (though it's not recommended because it destroys condoms)
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07-13-12, 04:02 AM #243Banned
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07-13-12, 03:20 PM #244
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07-13-12, 03:26 PM #245Banned
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haha
did it burn, string?
did some go in the phole?
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07-13-12, 05:55 PM #246Valued Senior Member
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Or they have a different judgment of medical need. Or in the Australian medical care system, the judgment in a situation of uncertainty is to reduce costs when possible even at the long term risk of the child's health - wouldn't be the first time.
Originally Posted by bells
Which brings us back to the topic of banning "their own" from some of the "each".
Originally Posted by bells
Because of reading the abstract and methods as described by the researchers.
Originally Posted by bells
Indeed. And such circumstances could easily screw up his stats, and invalidate his conclusions. So his not considering them, separating them out, is a bit startling. So is his explicit claim that all circumcisions are elective. I am unable to come up with exculpation for that.
Originally Posted by bells
The ones on the study were within 28 days of birth, according to the researchers who counted them. The ones in the larger world take place over the first year or so, the rate peaking three and four months after birth (during the transition from ape like to adult human larynx and esophageal morphology), according to links I have provided above.
Originally Posted by bells
I would compare the rates of premature death circumcised and uncircumcised, lifetime, before becoming appalled.
Originally Posted by bells
I too find the aesthetic argument ethically bankrupt, and the religious aspect of it repugnant. But it's not the only one on the table.
Originally Posted by bells
I haven't seen the deliberate flaws in the researchers's reports, of those studies. And I haven't seen an argument resting on them alone - they are not centrally important here.
Originally Posted by bells
So you deflect and obfuscate and avoid dealing with the matter - why?
Originally Posted by bells
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07-14-12, 06:35 PM #247
This just in:
"Religious groups breathed a sigh of relief on Friday as Germany's government promised to protect the ritual circumcision of young boys. The controversy was sparked this summer by a court in Cologne, which ruled against parents seeking to perform the ancient ritual on their babies. A child's "fundamental right to physical integrity" was more important, the court said. The president of the Conference of European Rabbis called the decision the "worst attack on Jewish life since the Holocaust." By pledging to protect the practice, Angela Merkel's government is sending a message: "We want Jewish and Muslim religious life in Germany," said her spokesman."
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07-19-12, 04:09 AM #248
I don't have phole sensitivity issues, though presumably had Vap-O-Rub gotten in there, such a sensitivity would have manifested.
I don't remember the thinking process (I was like XIV years old), but the wonderful "cooling sensation" seemed to be appealing in a sexual way . . . until it actually happened and felt like pepper spray mixed with vaseline.
~String
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07-19-12, 03:10 PM #249
(Insert Title Here)
I ... I ... I ....
Originally Posted by Superstring01
Right.
Of course, I'm the one who learned the hard way why chemical depilatories should not be used on ... ahem! ... "personal luggage".
All I can say about my thought process on that one is that I had done it successfully before without sustaining chemical burns.
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07-19-12, 03:15 PM #250
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07-19-12, 03:35 PM #251Bloodthirsty Barbarian
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I'm not so sure.
That is, I assume that what you refer to as "the aesthetic argument" is something callow like "I think circumcised penis looks better." Which, yeah, that's pretty silly. This is not a choice of paint colors we're talking about.
But my impression is that, in the real world, parents who opt to circumcise children for "aesthetic" reasons are thinking something like "I want my son's penis to resemble that of his father/brothers/other significant models of masculinity he is likely to encounter early in his development, so he doesn't get some idea that he is abnormal or deformed or something." Which, maybe that's a bunch of Freudian pap or paranoia, but it is a genuine ethical consideration about the best interests of the child on its face. This kind of thinking is what led circumcision to become widespread in the USA, and also why it is problematic to reverse that trend - and especially, why rhetoric about how circumcision is a "mutilation" or "deformity" or whatever is counterproductive. Any rhetorical strategy centered on deeming a vast number of males as having "wrong" or "bad" genitalia is going to generate massive resistance, right off the bat.
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