But it can't apply to whatever it is that I'm concerned about without you completely contradicting yourself. That's exactly my point. First you said "our best interest", then, when challenged, you changed it to "our children's best interests", then, when challenged again, you changed it essentially back to the collective 'our' best interests, but instead of concentrating on the issue in question you chose to try to appear smart by categorizing and listing all the different age groups that sprang to mind, and now it's back-fired on you.
I will admit that I suffer from a bit too much levity.
So, as things currently stand, you seem to be in favour of non-medical circumcision in respect of certain groups of people in the interests of all members of such groups, of which the child himself is but one (and a non-consenting one at that). Would you care to elaborate on what those 'best interests' are?
I realize that it can difficult to separate group vs. individual benefits (see any discussion on the unit of selection in evolution for examples). And it is beyond the scope of this discussion to do so. But my intent was to view it from an individual perspective - that I wasn't considering benefits to the group at the expense of the individual.
"Best interests" are things like "physical, mental, and social well-being" (from the WHO definition of health).
This is not intended to persuade, but just to explain my perspective. Since you disagree with even as simple a measure as naming, I wouldn't expect you to find any of these ideas acceptable.
I think you could try a little harder - seriously; this is a debating forum afterall, not a multiple-choice questionnaire. Please feel free to flesh out your responses beyond a single sentence, even a single word, in places, if you feel that in not doing so you might not convey the true meaning of your response. That would be immensely helpful all round.
That you are seriously suggesting that I don't do this already doesn't engender optimism.
That sounds rather defeatist for you, Linda, and you shouldn't be OK with it. All I'm looking for is straight answers to straight-forward questions. It's not hard if you just apply yourself and give them due thought before hitting the 'Submit Reply' button.
If you start with the realization that I do that already, it may allow you to see things differently.
So your answer applies to the practice of suicide bombing (amongst other practices), clearly.
Yes. It applies to all practices, rather than anything specific to suicide bombing. Which makes the qualification redundant.
Don't you mean 'weakens', and not 'strengthens'? I don't follow your reasoning otherwise.
I mean strengthens.
So, you think we should accept the 'status quo' that acts such as suicide bombing and genocide derive in society, because if we were to eliminate them then something equally appalling would 'simply' arise instead?
It's not that I simply want a society free of suicide bombings and genocide. It's that I want a society that is free of suicide bombings and genocide because it effectively deals with those things that would eventually lead to suicide bombings and genocide. I don't think that magically eliminating the end result leads to a society that can do that.
Regardless of how insanely flawed that reasoning sounds, it seems to me that we'd have nothing to lose and potentially much to gain by elimination. I reckon I'd take my chances with the elimination option, if I held the wand!
Okay.
But more to the point, as Ivor has already asked, what equally atrocious act do you think would fill the 'gap' that would be left gapingly open if circumcision was outlawed?
I don't know. You could look to a survey of the various body modifications around the world to make a guess, I suppose. I doubt you would find any of those any more acceptable than circumcision, but maybe you'd get lucky. Eliminating one particular option would do nothing to change the need which led to the practice in the first place.
I'm sorry you think that Linda, given that it's completely unfounded.
Evidence?
Linda