Can you back up your percentages, especially when it comes to sensitivity in males post circumcision? - kis
Hey Amn. Like I said before, I haven't read through this thread in entirety, so sorry if you already covered this, but where are you getting your statistics from? Men lose the same percentage of sensitivity as women when they're circumsized? Considering the clitoris has twice as many nerve endings as the entire penis, and only the foreskin is removed in male circumcision, I can't imagine that this is true. - LD
I spent a lotta time writing those posts so I'd appreciate if you WENTBACKANDREADUM!!
😀 yes, k,thnx.
This is a good point to bring up. Stats are a problem for both sides of the debate as a whole beyond this thread because both pro- and anti-circ arguments are beleaguered by biased data. Passions run so high on this topic (it makes the PS3-XBox-Wii flame wars look like a Tiddlywinks game) that both sides have a less-than-honest approach to presenting data; in fact, it's damn near impossible to get objective research on it because of all the factors coloring the methods, participants, and patients.
So I'm forced, like the main players on the world stage, to rely on the information that is available, and a lot of that is averages. What I do is take the stats and try to form a rounded probability scenario on each of them rather than adhering to them orthodoxically. So for instance, say I find several percentages on phimosis...well, since the figures conflict, I have to account for that discrepancy, so I take a logical deduction and then make a spectrum of averages rather than stating already dubious stats altogether. When I make that .2-10% circumcision figure, I'm including the reported percentages and then converting them into a rounded spectrum to account for the lack of an absolute. My commentary WAS SUPPOSED to address the variety in the numbers by accounting the high and low end.
I get my stats through wikipedia. You see, the main "foreskin" and "circumcision" pages are also victims of the biased activities of both sides, so you I can't rely on them themselves, but the hyperlinks lead to other satellite pages that tend to go unaltered. These pages themselves have links to other pages that exist outside the co-ed debating forums on the main wiki pages. Like I said, this is far from ideal, but since I can't bitch slap the pro- and anti-people into putting aside their bias and to collaborate on a universal objective study, I have to use what I can find.
One final note about the stats: on my last post, I tried to point out that the foreskin troubles tend to have their own probability rates independent of one another. There are multiple retraction problems, but not all of them are the same, not all have the same occurrence, and not all have the same treatment. But each one on its own has a similarly low level of occurrence.
So, let's say that HYPOTHETICALLY retraction problems afflict 51% of the uncircumcised population; that 51% is a sum or average of multiple retraction problems each one with its own individual percentage. And that percentage is also affected by territory (developed/developing/Third World, etc.), individual physiology, probability, and others. And in all those cases, the percentage rates of each tend to be fairly low...
low enough that in other fields of medicine no routine prophylactic treatment would be justified save for plague outbreaks. So there's no easy answer to stats, I can only go with what I can find.
Just as you can only go with what you can find in support of circumcision and opposition to FGM.
Also, it's not just sensitivity loss plaguing victims of FGM, it's a lifetime of pain during routine functions such as urination. It would be analogous, maybe, if circumsized men had the head of their penis removed.
- LD
I hate to sound like an advocate (because I'm NNNNNNNOT!), but you'd have to consider the hospital-based cases of FGM too. As I said and argued last time, I doubt any of you would advocate FGM even if it was performed in a sterile facility with anesthetic and professional doctors. But in those cases, the LIKELIHOOD of the complications you mentioned might be lower. I'm not saying they are, but the crudity of the back country FGM procedures are what leads to most of those complications, and you;d have to inquire if sterility and skill make a difference. Although I'm still pretty sure that wouldn't make a difference in your opinion about the wrongness of FGM.
I also hate to bring this up because it risks sounding like an everyday occurrence, but accidental penectomies DO occur. FGM, for all of its insidiousness is done with consideration of the vagina & uterus in mind: no culture, no matter HOW primitive would actively try to ruin their reproductive capabilities, and in spite of all that is taken off in FGM, the uterus still works. Now, in the worst case scenarios (and I will say there's LOTS of them),
an INFECTION FROM THE SURGERY can damage the uterus to dysfunction, but the surgery itself doesn't...otherwise the woman would be useless to the tribe/community and the "surgeon" would be removed from that job. In the case of male circumcision, it is possible, (especially because the infant penis is so small and the tools so sharp and large) to accidentally take off the top of the entire organ...or to damage the organ to the point where amputation must be done to prevent infection. Now...in those cases, what's the guy gonna do? He has no head, or no penis at all so how is he going to copulate? Sure, he can reproduce--you jam a syringe into his epididymus and extract them--but he can't have sex. Even the FGM's woman can do that, as much as she'd likely not want to.
This doesn't happen often, and the probability of it is pretty close to the probability of getting penile cancer/phimosis/etc.
But wouldn't you say that for a complication THAT severe isn't worth the risk even for a percentage that small? At least, on a procedure without life-or-death necessity. I don't want to sound dramatic, but what if your son became one of those accidental statistics...would you shrug it off and say "hey, the risks were comparable, I don't feel bad at all...cowboy up little guy, I'm sure you'll find some understanding woman and...y'know, work something out." Unlikely.
What are you still complaining about? Who invented circumcision? Who rules the religion? Who fabricated these routine procedures anyway? Male I suppose. Mothers were just given instructions. Even episiotomy (which is debatable procedure) is invented by a male doctor. The first heart transplant was done by a male, they hailed it. Isn't it that male create all the major decision-making tasks in the world? I have NO problem with that. I admire that. But it seems you have a problem not getting even.
- Bohemienne
No one knows who invented circumcision--I jokingly referred to a fictional Egyptian surgeon named Farbitzquiddle--because the practice predates the let's-document-ourselves-extensively period we enjoy today. What we do know is who began the modern movement that became routine neonatal circumcision, and also their motives. The original originator was probably male, but does that make it alright? If a woman invented a device that became a popular tool for rapists does that mean that it's alright because a woman invented it?
I like that you brought up episiotomy, because it also shares a thread with this topic. Episiotomies have become one of the many controversial gynecological topics, alongside of preventative hysterectomies. In the case of the latter, it's been done in the past as a way of dealing with pesky fibroid tumors that tend to affect a large number of women. Yet, in spite of the health risks AND the health benefits, a lot of women and men are saying "Waitaminute...do you have to go THAT far? Can't you think of some less drastic method to treat this problem?" And as a result of that skepticism and empathy, research is now being done on that and hysterectomies are becoming less frequent for that problem. And episiotomies the same. In fact, virtually every extreme surgery for common problems is being rethought today, even in cancer research which has traditionally required the biggest guns we've made. Somebody, somewhere, put aside the medical data and thought "is this too much?" and tried to figure a different idea out, and it's been paying off. But based on the responses I;ve seen here and the responses on the pro-circ forums, people don't seem to apply that thought to foreskins...circumcision's traditionally been the catch-all solution to any number of problems: "Got phimosis? Cut it off! Got a mole? Cut it off!" But thanks to the kind of thinking that I mentioned above, people rethought it and figured out less severe treatments for foreskin problems, probably to the point where one day circumcision will be a rare procedure.
And it SEEMS like most of you--I'm not accusing anyone--are saying that that kind of insight that serves other procedures so well shouldn't even be considered at all when it comes to circumcision.
Why do famous worldwide cause oriented groups take FGM seriously if it's not a barbaric matter? You should count your blessings.
What determines a barbaric act? It's a collection of necessity and sympathy and sometimes other aggregates as well. So much of the properties of FGM match circumcision that it surprises me that everyone thinks barbarism can be separated with the kind of justifications being offered for male circumcision.
And as for counting my blessings, I'm pretty sure that somewhere in FGM countries, a surgeon performing these procedures with a "progressive" outlook who actually considers a woman's pleasure in sex would say the same thing to an FGM opponent, and consider that opinion rational and not expect to be beaten to death with a shovel. Why shouldn't the same be true here for male circumcision? (the animosity, not the beating-to-death-with-a-shovel thing)
I think the bottom line comes to you being offended because we don't acknowledge that FGM and male circumcision are the same. You want validation of such and from me, I can't satisfy that for you.
- kis
Neither one of us--I don't think--is setting out to convert the other and thereby declare some kind of victory; as much as I hate circumcision I'm not advocating its elimination entirely...that's absurd; as flawed as I SUSPECT some of your opinions may be, I don't think they're unfounded and completely wrong. The point of argument is to expand knowledge and examine and test ideas, not to "win" by being "right". Most of my frustration and exasperation with you and the others--hence all of the dreaded boldfacing and underlining that provokes PurrBast's chagrin--is because I'm not sensing any kind of alteration in your opinions...not that you're coming over to my side, but that you're not even considering the points I've been making. I don't sense any sense of "okay, I see where you're coming from...you might be right about the circumstantial aspects of it, but I still argue that it has it's place...but not on the same foundation as I previously held." That's not ME WINNING and YOU LOSING...that's an indication that the opinion has become more complex.
A lot of the points you've made I've already encountered and considered before I even came to my present position. I was never "THAT IS SO WRONG I DON'T CARE WHAT ANYBODY ELSE SAYS!" when I was forming my opinions...I made myself do that. But even if I hadn't encountered
kis' and co.'s opinions before, I would have incorporated them into my own opinions now.
After all, you don't believe what you believe for no reason...you might have a valid point. And that validity can change my opinion, as stubborn as I might seem...I just haven't seen anything yet to make me conclude that the validity of male circumcision trumps all of the other considerations in play.
Can you back up your percentages, especially when it comes to sensitivity in males post circumcision? Also it still doesn't cover the fact that there is no point of reference for sensitivity loss to the male who was circumsized at birth.
You're right in the sense that a male circumcised at birth has no point of reference to what his pre-circumcision sensitivity was. For that, we have to go to the men who were circumcised LATER in life, and the evidence shows that there IS a difference, albeit with differing levels of importance. Some men are not affected by the difference, and some men ARE; it's a case-by-case basis with no discernible predictors over which person will be affected by which affect. Some men like the change, others despise it (I read a quote once where one guy said he'd trade his house to have his foreskin back, lol), but all of them notice a difference. So we can apply that to newborns as well: some of them would appreciate the change if given a comparison, others would not.
I would also ask how the prepubescent girls who undergo FGM before their orgasm response is formed or developed can compare pre-FGM sensitivity to post-FGM sensitivity. If sensitivity during sex is a main factor, then neither the FGM victims or circumcised males have a point of reference. Yet in males that's considered acceptable but in women it's considered unacceptable. So neither FGM'd girls nor circumcised boys have a point of reference for sexual pleasure loss so they don't know what they're missing...yet when it comes to FGM, we say "She'll never experience full sexual pleasure and THAT'S HORRIBLE! WE MUST STOP THIS!" but with circumcision we say "He'll never experience full sexual pleasure and...ah it's not important." More on this below.
Even with anesthesia and done in a hospital, FGM goes right back to intent. No matter how allegedly safe the procedure is FGM is to insure the girl doesn't sleep around before she's married. What procedure are they doing to make sure the boys/men don't do the same?
Now, I do want to clear up this little disagreement. I never meant to say that FGM and circumcision are THE SAME THING. I always meant to say that they are equally heinous and unjustifiable. From a procedure standpoint, they are different because you're talking about different genitalia with different designs and different compositions, so the affects of each surgery are different.
Although I DO argue that since the penis and the clitoris (and subsequent substructures) are homologous, then these different surgeries are affecting the same tissues.
When you think about all the reasons why FGM is wrong, do you think that it's the combination of reasons that makes it wrong or do you think each reason is sufficient independent of the other?
EX:
1. FGM is used to subjugate women.
That makes it wrong/unjustifiable.
2. FGM has no discernible medical benefit.
That makes it wrong/unjustifiable.
3. FGM is excruciatingly painful.
That makes it wrong/unjustifiable.
4. FGM removes substantial sexual pleasure.
That makes it wrong/unjustifiable.
5. FGM can cause complications.
That makes it wrong/unjustifiable.
6. FGM is done on non-consenting children.
That makes it wrong/unjustifiable.
Unless I miss my guess, any one of those 6 reasons are good enough on their own. Hell, look at #3...FGM is sometimes done with anesthesia, but even THAT doesn't overturn the conclusion. Each one of these considerations is strong enough on its own to oppose FGM in every capacity. Do you honestly believe that if there was even 1 counterargument in that list above that supported FGM that it would justify it?
Now most of #1-6 MATCH EXACTLY with male circumcision and yet even the COMBINED reasons don't overturn the main reason why it's supported: a set of health problems with a .2-10% probability rate. And if I were smarter, I probably would have found a way to say that 3 posts ago, but, too late now.
I suppose it all boils down to our concept of what defines barbarism/violation? We've repeatedly butted heads over the memory issue: girls undergoing FGM often remember the incident, circumcised boys never remember their surgery. To me it seemed like the memory thing sounded too much like the whole "Tree in the forest" question: "if a tree falls in the forest and no one's present it does it make a sound?" Well, yes, because the physics of "sound" is such that observation isn't required to exist: a tree's mass would be affected by gravity in such a way that falling would cause vibrations in air strong enough for humans to detect (a feather landing on water probably makes sound, just none that we can hear). If a person is subjected to a painful procedure and doesn't remember it does that mean the procedure doesn't violate their integrity, effect their mind, or contradict the principles of our culture or offend our humanity?
That's why I tried to point out the rare occasions when FGM is done on infant girls, because then an unjustifiable procedure and a "justifiable" procedure share the same key ingredient that otherwise separates them; and in those cases that consideration seems irrelevant in the positions many of you take, and that baffles me. It's like discovering a major anomaly with canon-changing potential and then ignoring it "just because".
And the empathy argument is very important. Here's a point I've been trying to make: I DON'T HAVE A VULVA...AND YET I AM STILL AGAINST FGM. I CAN SYMPATHIZE WITH AN ANATOMY I DON'T EVEN HAVE! MY EMPATHY/SYMPATHY FOR FGM VICTIMS ISN'T CONTINGENT ON MEDICAL DATA. I don't look at FGM and say "before I form an empathic response, let me consult this gynecology research...EEEK! Okay, now I have a validated opinion!" But women in general seem to be doing it this way.
And I'm not saying that it's ONLY WOMEN supporting circumcision, because there's lots of men too. But I have noticed that an overwhelming number of women seem to have an indifferent attitude to something affecting men that they want sympathy for in their own gender.
Women all over are saying "We want your understanding and empathy for females enduring FGM...but we don't extend that same extrospection to men, it's irrelevant". If I can step into someone else's shoes for an issue that doesn't affect me, then why can't others reciprocate? Isn't that selective empathy, which denotes a mild form of depraved indifference or at LEAST bias?
I am normally the first person to jump on anything "Anti-Male" but religion is most often created by men to favor men.
- SlaverTickler
Well, I wasn't saying that ALL reasons for circumcision were anti-male...I was more arguing that the gender bias was ONE OF THE MOTIVATIONS for ignoring the overlapping aspects of FGM & circumcision.