Loss Leader
I would save the receptionist., Moderator
There's a report in The Economist this week...
http://www.economist.com/science/displaystory.cfm?story_id=11579114
...that explains how circumcision enables older males in societies to keep younger ones under control.
So the obvious answer is: of course you circumcise your child, but bear in mind that you are doing so for purely selfish reasons.
The research described in this article appears to be insane. From the article's explanation of Wilson's theories:
But there are several ways [circumcision] may affect fertility: most obviously, the lack of a foreskin could make insertion, ejaculation or both take longer. Perhaps long enough that an illicit quickie will not always reach fruition.
Fine, but the researcher doesn't actually test this theory. It's certainly easy enough to do so - Offer a bunch of college kids $10.00 to masturbate as fast as they can and have them report their times. Don't ask them if they're cut or uncut before they report their times so as not to "prime" them for any particular stereotype that might be floating out there.
The writer of the paper fails to do this. Instead, he engages in a bizarre anthropological game:
Dr Wilson made several predictions. Among them, he suggested that mutilation is more likely to be practised in polygynous societies ... and is especially likely in those polygynous societies where a man’s co-wives live in separate households from their husband.... To test his predictions, Dr Wilson looked at a database of 186 pre-industrial societies. Some 48% of the highly polygynous ones practised a form of male-genital mutilation, and the number rose to 63% when co-wives kept separate households.
That's great, except Wilson didn't make any predictions at all, did he? The man is studying Neurobiology and Behavior at Cornell. He already knew what types of societies were in the history books. He had already studied them.
By the way, the article wrongly calls Wilson a dictor, He's still a student.