Aaahhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh, it's been a while since I've had such a delicious bout of discussion that hadn't degenerated into a flame war.

Okey-dokey, let's see what we have here...lemme address
kis first.
1. If this procedure is done literally hours after birth, how does any male know or remember the level of pain?
2a....how does the male infant know down the road that this is a sensitivity issue? I haven't heard one circumsized male post that they're less sensitive due to circumscision. 2b. The female circumsision/mutilation has a lot of info on the books that it decreases sensitivity and it's done on much older females, hence the pain factor. If you're cutting the vulva and the clit, exactly what's left to find sex enjoyable and pleasurable? Not much IMO. She's left literally no more than a hole for her husband to stick himself into and babies to fall out of.
3. There are cultures that suscribe to men enjoying sex and woman doing their wifely duties for their man. They don't care if women enjoy it.
1. You have a point, since they likely won't. But there has been some evidence collected that sometimes post-op infants become withdrawn following the procedure, including withdrawing from nursing. Now, this doesn't happen EVERY time, but often enough that people took notice, and its eerily similar to the state of hypervigilant shock that rape victims suffer: they withdraw, they sequester themselves, and they react to being touched/approached. Pain has a way of affecting emotions and even the wiring of the brain, even in short but intense doses; long-term pain can actually drive someone to insanity, and short-term pain can induce temporary PTSD. Now, as humans age, that response becomes more complex, but in infants who are absorbing/experiencing everything emotionally rather than intellectually, it might have unknown consequences that don't register consciously, but manifest themselves in one's everyday life.
Philosophically, is age-related memory loss an excuse inflict pain on people? As I said, you could rape a 4 month-old, or stab a 6 month-old in the hand with pins, and all sorts of other things that won't kill them...you can't go in court and use "Your honor, they're not gonna REMEMBER it or anything!" as an excuse. From a PRINCIPLE standpoint, a violation/assault is a violation/assault regardless of age or recollection...and oftentimes, penalties are drafted IN CONSIDERATION of age. Even in adults, trauma can be forgotten by a victim, but the evidence can still be used against the victimizer.
Also, parents everywhere use believe that bombarding the fetus with soothing classical music can affect prenatal mental development, so if music can affect them before they're born, what can a skinning surgery do AFTER they're born?
However, there's no evidence to really give this argument any weight so don't invest too much in it, I just felt it was a nifty point.
2a. How do girls who undergo FGM when they're less than a year old (yes it happens) know either? Just like the males who were cut at 2-8 days old, they won't know what they're missing...unless the uncut women around them start telling them all the time. Somehow, this doesn't get a pass when considering FGM, but does when considering MGM.
2b. It disgusts me to say this because I'm completely against FGM, BUT TECHNICALLY, there is still VAGINAL stimulation; a woman is more than the sum of her clitoris. YES I KNOW, vaginal is almost never enough, but, just like the glans/head of a circumcised penis, it's SOMETHING...and in the US, that "SOMETHING" is "good enough" in most women's minds when they send their sons off to the outpatient ward.
Another thing I hate to bring up is that there are at least 4 WHO categories of FGM, and not all of them remove the clitoris (Type I & some Type IIIs), which means that the devastating loss of sensitivity is not universal...but that of course doesn't make a difference when referring to WOMEN does it? Men it's okay, but in WOMEN that's different, right?
*interesting note: the clitoris is only the tip of the iceberg; the clitoris extends internally into a network of nerve-rich branches embedded in a firm Y-shaped tissue that actually becomes "erect" during stimulation. This "Y" is called the clitoral crura, and can be stimulated via pressure from inside (and rarely outside) the vagina. The clitoris is homologous to the penis, meaning it's the same tissue, and it's likely that those nerves in the "Y" would line the foreskin had the genders been different, but in the case of women, those nerves are protected from surgical removal by being internal rather than external. So the clitoris doesn't get ALL of its sensitivity in the head, but also along the clitoral crura, which means that in a way, male circumcision removes what could very well be the G-Spot in women...NOW let's see if the women can feel men's pain at that little item.
I won't address #3 because this answer is too long already...otherwise I WOULD! Moving on...
an orgasm occurs from within, and must feel the same in the urethra whether one's trimmed or not. The only difference is the the glans, now being uncovered permanently, toughens, loses some sensitivity, and thus would require more stimulation, i.e. a longer period of contact before climax is achieved. In other words, sex has to last longer. Is this a problem, ladies?- Libertine
In the FGM argument, ANY LOSS OF SENSITIVITY is considered unacceptable and reason enough to ban the procedure outright, and label any WILLING participants as "crazy brainwashed women who are kowtowing to cultural pressure". The difference in sensitivity loss between men & women in genital cutting is about 20%, which is very close together, but apparently enough to say "eh, s'okay" for men. But also, the skin of the penis is not the same as the skin on your arm: yes, it's epithelial tissue, but its not epidermis, and although the glans does thicken and toughen, its not actually SUPPOSED to, and there's still ongoing research as to whether this process attributes to the "painful rubbing" syndrome that occurs when you apply direct contact to the head before/after orgasm (you might still find clips in TIB's HJ store that emphasize this phenomenon).
As for the "lasting longer" argument, evidence suggests a draw in un/cut men. The difference seems to be a case-by-case basis, which makes sense because not all genitals are made the same. But as for whether this is a BENEFIT, I have to step outside my professional demeanor here.
Saying that men lasting longer is a good thing is like saying "all women take forever to climax." Which for me seems like something that should OFFEND women more than amuse them: saying a man cums too fast is an insult, but saying a woman takes forever isn't? You may as well be calling them "vagidaires" because it verges on calling them frigid: "Oh you know me, I'm so bad it takes me an hour just to get wet". Women will tell you that they can cum as fast and hard as a man, but it requires more specific stimulation...a LEARNED skill that a lot of men don't master. In this case it would seem that it's more of a chemistry/technique/psychology problem than a time problem.
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Originally Posted by Amnesiac View Post
Surgery is done without patient's consent
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1. So is any other surgery or vaccination when your under 18.
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Originally Posted by Amnesiac View Post
Surgery removes large percentage of sexual sensitivity
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2. I find this one the best. I have NEVER had any problems with a lack a sensitivity during sex. If anything I have too much sensitivity. If you had 10 billion dollars, and someone told you you used to have 100 billion dollars but your parents took it away, would you be mad that you only have 10 billion?
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Originally Posted by Amnesiac View Post
Age-related memory loss argued as shield against emotional trauma
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3. How about the trauma of birth?
1. Foreskins don't kill babies; polio, diphtheria, and meningitis do. Circumcision is not a life-or-death decision (even in most penile cancer cases) as evidenced by the number of 70-90 year-old uncircumcised men in Europe and Japan. Vaccinations are demonstrably instrumental in preserving your LIFE, which is why parental are allowed to order them in the first place; whether parents should retain that authority in optional cosmetic surgeries is more dubious. And in many cases, parents are now using that authority to refuse inoculations for safety concerns.
2. Yes I would (and I'm not even a bailout recipient) because it means somebody got the other $90 billion and is having more fun than me. Also, $10 billion is great for starting a business or enjoying a luxurious lifestyle, but it isn't enough to do anything world-changing because you'd deplete it just getting the materials and permits. With $100 billion you could buy and restore the entire rain forest because the money wouldn't spend fast enough to run out before the project was done.
3. Could you elaborate on this one? Do you mean like, thermal shock from uterus-to-outside?
*Phew!* Okay, there. Just let me re-iterate for those who think I'm taking an absolutist stance or in case my posts have been repetitious (I hope they haven't been, because I want to have a damn REASON for my opinions) that I'M NOT AGAINST VOLUNTARY CIRCUMCISION, JUST NON-CONSENSUAL NEONATAL circumcision. I just think that performing neonatal circumcision routinely violates freedom of choice and diminishes sensitivity for a paltry amount of debatable benefits with matching complication ratios and a cultural aesthetic founded on faulty 19th century medicine and defended by a gender bias against men: what is important in genital cutting in women is largely dismissed in genital cutting for men, and what bothers me most is that these discrepancies don't seem to register with people in general at all.
To finish this post I'll give you a case in point:
Here's another point I'd like to make concerning aesthetics. Every now and then in my research, I see a video of a neonatal circumcision, and the surgeon--strangely it's often (but not exclusively) a FEMALE nurse/doctor--performing the surgery, once finished and usually with the nervous parent in the room, will reference a raw, bleeding organ with a reassuring chirp of "Oh, it's beautiful!" (yes, I've heard it more than once)
...come on now. If anything like that was said following an FGM procedure, any one of you would likely beat the surgeon half to death for that remark alone. Do you think that the data concerning hygiene/sensitivity loss/cultural bias/etc. has anything to do with your emotional reaction?