Tsukasa Buddha
Other (please write in)
- Joined
- Sep 10, 2006
- Messages
- 15,302
Tsuka are you really that eager to start a dialogue with me? After insulting me? I'm not interested.
Cheers.
Take your ball and go home.
I would think so. I think people are making too big a deal of this. The conflict arises when the cultural norm is one way and people don't conform. And yes we all know that conformity is not good. We've all seen The Dead Poets Society. Of course its very easy to talk about the fact that women should not care or to raise all this shocked and stunned arguments yadda yadda.
But to actual parents this isn't a philosophical discussion on an online message board. In real life things are different.
In the real world you took a lot of time to say nothing.
I mean why not argue then that a parent shouldn't care if their child is over eating because any decent woman would love a man no matter how fat he is.
False analogy. Maybe when most parents worry about their kids over-eating, they aren't concerned about their future ability to find a mate.
Just maybe.
This kind of thinking is what I perceive as extraordinarily narrow minded and selfish.
Like circumcising your child because you don't want to have to worry about for too long?
The idea that a parents view is the one that matters is no different than arguing that the supposed child's view that no one yet knows but presumably is going to be opposite of what the parent wants should be honored.
False dichotomy.
The point has been raised about how devasting it would be to a man to realize that someone else decided how his penis should look. All well and good in theory.
But in reality the social norm is generally circumcized in the US. A penis, when depicted in media for example is generally depicted as circumsized. This is what a "penis" looks like. So NOT to circumsize is choosing what the penis is going to look like as well.
Hm, I expect most people who have taken Moral Dilemmas 101 would disagree here. The result of an inaction is ethically distinct from the result of an action.
In a more base approach, choosing not to circumcise is letting the child choose what his penis will look like.
Also, as has been pointed out, half of kids today are uncircumcised. Do you really think the social norm does not change from generation to generation?
What I wonder is if I was a man and my parents had made the decision not to circumsize based on the idea that I wouldn't want it, well if I was a guy I'd want a circumsized penis because I think it looks nicer. If my parents had not gotten it done I'd be annoyed because its much easier to do it as a newborn than as an adult. I'd be pissed that they allowed their flakey new age sentiments to get in the way of common sense.
Then it would be rather easy to fix, and under your control to get rid of your foreskin.
Now what if it was vice versa?
What I wonder is if I was a man and my parents had made the decision to circumsize based on the idea that I would want it, well if I was a guy I wouldn't want a circumsized penis because I think it is an unnecessary, cosmetic surgery. If my parents had gotten it done I'd be annoyed because now I don't have a foreskin. I'd be pissed that they allowed their irrational, cultural sentiments to get in the way of common sense, like not chopping off a bit of your child's penis so that it is easier for him to get action with the ladies.
There's a million ways to look at this argument. None of them are more righteous than the others.
And we live in a monotone world of grey. ID and evolution are equally valid theories.