We are hypocrites if one is bad and the other is good

I’m sorry for the theme today, but this story warrants a mention:

A father stands accused of the unthinkable: brutally cutting his daughter’s genitals.

The girl was only 2.

I’m not going to say anything beyond the obvious, for it’s unnecessary. The Female Genital Mutilation Act prohibits what the father allegedly did to his daughter. His action¹ is despicable and demands a harsh penalty if he is convicted.

That’s not the end of the story, from my perspective. The obvious connection to male circumcision should be clear. I’ve made the comparison in the past, maintaining that the difference between the two is one of degree, not kind. For anyone who disagrees, consider:

Adem’s trial may be a landmark case for health and human rights activists fighting against the African custom they call genital mutilation. But for those close to the victim, this trial is about vindication and healing for a little girl who was forced to endure unbearable pain.

In America we circumcise healthy infant males without anesthesia². How much pain do they endure? Is it unbearable? The comparison is not ridiculous.

“When I saw that child I saw myself. I could see the pain in her eyes,” said Soraya Mire, a filmmaker and activist who was circumcised when she was 13 in Somalia. Mire is known for her 1994 documentary “Fire Eyes” in which she chronicled her struggles after having the procedure.

I met Ms. Mire at the 9th International Symposium on Circumcision in Seattle this August, where she shared her story. I listened as she advocated the position that both male and female circumcision are genital mutilation. By stating that, and in posting my agreement, I don’t mean to minimize what she endured or what this little girl endured. It only indicates that the severity of the cutting does not change the ethical violation of the action, the genital cutting of a healthy, non-consenting person. Societal customs may differentiate between the two, as our’s does, but where it differs, it is wrong. Both are barbaric violations of individual rights.

Fortunate Adem [the girl’s mother] refused to comment for this article but has said her daughter suffered severe pain since the circumcision.

“Her whole life has been changed,” she said. “She is going to be traumatized psychologically. Parts of her body have been taken away from her without her consent. They need to look at this child the same way they would if she had been raped.”

We can argue about the various issues involved with Ms. Adem’s statement, but one of her claims applies to male circumcision, as well. If removing parts of a girl’s healthy genitalia without her consent is wrong, it’s wrong for boys. There are no exceptions based on ease of removal or societal tradition.

¹ The father pleaded innocent. The article mentions a claim that the mother’s family could’ve performed the circumcision. I do not know. Whoever circumcised the girl should be punished.

² Please do not mistake this as an argument that using anesthesia permits the surgery’s justification. Anesthetized circumcision should be the minimum level of medical intervention, but it does not change the unethical nature of non-medically indicated circumcision on an unconsenting individual. Any argument that it does is mind-numbingly misconceived.

The first of many needed victories

I’m anxious to read the judge’s reasoning, but this is unexpected and amazing:

In a case that has been closely watched by anti-circumcision groups nationwide, a Cook County judge today ruled that a 9-year-old Northbrook boy should not be circumcised against his will.

In a written opinion handed down today, Circuit Judge Jordan Kaplan found that “the evidence was conflicting and inconclusive as to any past infections or irritations that may have been suffered by the child.”

“Moreover,” he continued, “this court also finds that medical evidence as provided by the testimony of the expert witnesses for each of the parties is inconclusive as to the medical benefits or non-benefits of circumcision as it relates to the 9-year-old child.”

The case was a clear victory for the growing number of so-called “intactivist¹ groups” across the country that have argued that circumcision is harmful and violates the rights of children who are not old enough to consent to the irreversible medical procedure.

Kaplan, who also cited the irreversible nature of the operation, said his order would remain in effect until the boy turns 18, when he can decide for himself whether or not he wants to be circumcised.

Finally, a dose of sanity from our court system regarding the limits of parental rights existence of a child’s rights. Granted, I suspect Judge Kaplan’s ruling is much more limited than I’d like, since the boy’s parents are divorced. If they’d agreed, this case wouldn’t happen and the boy’s rights would’ve been ignored. That societal oversight isn’t going away just because Judge Kaplan ruled correctly in this case. However, this is still great news.

Worth noting in this is something I’ve heard from pro-infant circumcision individuals. They’ll ask why I care so much about their son’s penis. The short answer is that I don’t care about his penis. I care about his rights, which I know are clearly being violated. He can’t consent and enough evidence exists to indicate that he wouldn’t consent if given the choice later in life. I’m not against circumcision, but it should be medically necessary or left to adult males to decide for themselves. As such, I don’t believe the question should be why I care so much about a boy’s penis. Instead parents should ask themselves why they care so little. He is born with a healthy, intact penis. Amputating part of it is the radical position.

¹ I’m familiar with the term intactivist. It’s cute and descriptive, but because it’s cute, I do not like it. As the article shows, it does little more than give reporters an excuse to fill in the story with details at which typical readers will roll their eyes. That’s not helpful.

Gender myopia and sexual violence

I don’t want to imply any less seriousness surrounding these findings, because they’re worth noting and correcting:

Nearly 60 percent of women in Ethiopia is subject to sexual violence by a partner, a new UN report revealed yesterday.

The report said violence against women persists at high rates around the world, and governments are not doing enough to prevent it.

This is a real issue, and stopping it is a legitimate government task. However, given the UN’s misguided stance on equality, this makes me angry:

At a news conference launching the report, Undersecretary-General for Economic and Social Affairs Jose Antonio Ocampo called violence against women “a pervasive phenomenon- it’s really a global problem that has to be addressed.” “According to the quantitative estimates, which certainly underestimate the amount of violence that occurs, at least one out of three women experiences violence at some stage of their lives,” he said. “The report states that the major form of violence takes place at the domestic level, in the households … and it takes place in societies throughout the world.” In addition to spontaneous violence, the report also condemned what it found to be high levels of institutionalized violence, such as female circumcision, estimating that 130 million girls and women living today had undergone this practice.

I’ve made the distinctions between male and female genital mutilation before, mostly to explain that it’s a difference in degree, not kind. I stand by that. The UN rightly addresses female circumcision as institutional violence, yet promotes male circumcision as an appropriate prevention tool against HIV infection. From the Fact Sheet, consider these statements:

Depending on culture, circumcision is usually performed soon after birth or during adolescence as a coming-of-age rite.

It is estimated that globally, about 20% of men, and some 35% of men in developing countries, are circumcised for religious, cultural, medical or other reasons.

And:

Female genital mutilation/cutting (sometimes incorrectly referred to as female circumcision) comprises all surgical procedures involving partial or total removal of the external genitalia or other injuries to the female genital organs for cultural or other nontherapeutic reasons.

There is no condemnation of injuries to male genital organs for cultural or other nontherapeutic reasons, even though such reasons are explicitly included to explain why parents cut their male children. If the UN (and anyone else who denies the obvious similarities) browsed through justifications for female circumcision in countries that permit it, they would recognize arguments bearing a striking resemblance to the reasons given for male circumcision in developed nations. Hygiene, aesthetics, partner approval, they’re all there. So what’s different? Do we permit assault because it’s not as bad as murder?

The post where I praise the Bush Administration

This is wonderful news:

The Bush administration has decided to end its funding of a groundbreaking program that has sought to curb the spread of HIV by offering subsidized circumcisions to men in Swaziland.

A statement issued Thursday night by the U.S. Agency for International Development said that it had only recently learned of the program and that it violated government policy supporting study of circumcision but not services offering the procedure.

In its statement, USAID said the funding “should not have occurred, and there will be no further circumcisions performed with U.S. Government funds until the PEPFAR Scientific Steering Committee reviews data from ongoing clinical trials and considers any recommendations on male circumcision from the normative international Agencies.” PEPFAR is the Bush anti-AIDS program.

According to the article taxpayer money only paid for adult circumcisions. That makes me happier less angry, but barely. I’m not sure where funding AIDS prevention in Africa falls within the Constitutional responsibilities granted to the United States government, but that’s not my issue. I’m not going to approach the scientific implications, either. I’m still not denying them; I just don’t believe they’re enough for the reasons I’ve explained in the past.

I applaud this primarily because I don’t believe circumcision is the most effective HIV prevention for the Third World. Economic development would have a far greater impact. Clean water would have a far greater impact. If we’re going to be involved, we need to set the foundation for allowing these men (and women) to help themselves. They need some hope that engaging in safer sex will result in a better life, a life with opportunity.

This means no longer propping up corrupt dictators who squander our foreign aid. That’s easily said, and I accept that. The details, which I haven’t provided beyond the most basic form, are important. But it seems obvious that we need to remove diseased regimes. Removing healthy foreskins only hides the symptoms.

This fails my ethics test

Related to Saturday’s post on the use of discarded foreskins, consider:

… Dr Indira Hinduja once again became the first Indian scientist to use human feeder layer as medium to develop three human embryonic stem cell lines.

“We conduct our research strictly adhering to the Indian Council of Medical Research (ICMR) Guidelines and the embryos are taken for research with the full consent of both the husband and wife and are documented legally,” she said.

“We also take the necessary consent of the parents as well as the surgeons concerned for the human feeder as they are taken from foreskin when the circumcision is done in children between new born and up to five years”, Hinduja said.

I can think of considerations that would make this less troublesome, but they’re unlikely, so I will ignore them here. Guidelines are good, though, and acknowledging the use of the discarded foreskin through a consent form is commendable. However, whose consent is missing from this equation?

The ethics of vanity

Here’s an excerpt from a presentation (from 2001, I believe) entitled “Rejuvenation of Aging and Photodamaged Skin Utilizing Fibroblast Conditioned Media”:

A newborn baby’s skin produces an abundance of compounds important to healthy young skin, including growth factors antioxidants, soluble collagens, and matrix proteins that confer structure to skin. Over time, environmental stressors like ultra-violet radiation, cigarette smoke, wind and pollution deplete these compounds. Meanwhile, as we age, our bodies gradually lose the ability to effectively produce these elements. So our skin wrinkles, sags and roughens.

This natural mixture of newborn skin compounds is produced by Advanced Tissue Sciences, Inc. to from a pioneering process in the emerging field of tissue engineering that utilizes fibroblast cells from neonatal foreskins to produce human tissue replacements for the treatment of serious burns, wounds and other therapeutic indications. Fibroblasts are the cells responsible for growth and repair of the dermal layer of skin. The patented tissue engineering process stimulates normal human newborn skin fibroblast cells grown in the laboratory to deposit matrix proteins, including collagens, growth factors and antioxidants to form a human dermal tissue structure. In addition to assembly of these components into a tissue, the cells secrete soluble forms of these compounds into the solution (termed media) used to nourish the cells. The resultant fibroblast conditioned media is separated from the cells and tissue to serve as a natural, highly efficacious, ingredient for anti-aging cosmeceuticals. The fibroblast conditioned media contains the array of naturally produced factors which aging skin makes less efficiently and sometimes in smaller quantities.

Advanced Tissue Sciences, Inc. sold its assets in 2003 to SkinMedica in bankruptcy. SkinMedica now has an array of products that include human fibroblast conditioned media. Its site does not indicate specifically that this means “developed from neonatal foreskins,” so I am not making that claim with regard to its products. However, Dr. Patricia Wexler said as much when she appeared on Oprah.

Does anyone else see the ethical quandary this presents? The boy has not consented to unnecessary surgery, yet a healthy portion of his body is amputated. The discarded foreskin is then used by a third party to develop a commercial beauty product¹. Somebody is making money on this, and it’s not the now foreskin-free boy.

Providing compensation to the circumcised boy would not change my opinion, or ease the violation of routine infant circumcision. That should be obvious. But it does further illustrate how little the rights of infant males are considered in the routine practice of circumcision in America. There is a disconnect when reason does not tell us that using an infant’s foreskin so that adults can pretend that time does not exist is not acceptable.

Note: It makes no difference if the human fibroblast conditioned media is used to treat burn victims instead of those too vain to age. The boy does not lose his right to bodily integrity because someone else suffered burns. Individual rights can’t be trumped by any notion of who “needs” the skin more.

¹ Two human collagen products, CosmoDerm® and CosmoPlast®, contain cells replicated from discarded foreskins.

Rethinking parental rights

This is more than a week old, but I’ve finally figured out how I want to make my point. Two unrelated stories demonstrate how I believe we should view parental rights. First, here’s a useful ruling from Nebraska:

A federal judge has refused to throw out Nebraska’s one-of-a-kind newborn blood screening law. Ray and Louise Spiering of Saunders County filed a lawsuit challenging the law in 2004, arguing that the mandatory blood test would violate a tenet of their religious beliefs as members of the Church of Scientology.

On Tuesday, U.S. District Judge Richard Kopf said the law is constitutional.

In Tuesday’s ruling, Kopf said “Nebraska’s program is rationally related to a legitimate governmental interest.”

“It is true that the due process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment protects the `fundamental right’ of parents to make decisions as to the care, custody and control of their children,” Kopf said. “But it is equally true that a state is not without constitutional control over parental discretion in dealing with children when their physical or mental health is jeopardized.”

Then there is this story about the parents who allegedly kidnapped their pregnant 19-year-old daughter, took her to another state, and tried to force to abort her fetus because the baby’s father is black. I won’t examine the parental right aspect of that crime because it’s obvious. This case and the Nebraska ruling have an impact on the parental rights discussion in relation to circumcision.

Defenders of parental choice for non-medically indicated infant circumcision discuss the surgery’s potential benefits. Whether it’s urinary tract infections, penile cancer, or HIV, few claims are insufficient to allow parents the right to alter their children sons. I’ve argued the opposite side of that debate, stating that the inherent risks and potential complications are enough to protect boys from unnecessary surgery. We expect one standard for every surgery on girls and every surgery but circumcision for boys, but we grant parents virtually unlimited choice in reasons for male infant circumcision. There is no medical validity required. Parents don’t have to concern themselves with that in today’s medical/legal environment.

Anything beyond the medical non-necessity of most circumcisions shouldn’t be required in the discussion. Once that’s established as the default biological scenario for boys, his right to bodily integrity would be enough. Yet, I’ve heard libertarians debate parental choice for circumcision, with the conclusion by some that parents do have the right to impose it for their own reason(s). As a libertarian it makes me angry to hear this logic. My understanding of libertarianism focuses on individual rights. Children have those rights, with parents acting as guardians of those rights. This guardianship does not transform parents into property owners. To permit surgery, the child must need circumcision. Parental preference for any reason is not sufficient, given his right to bodily integrity.

The bits of Judge Kopf’s ruling I’ve highlighted demonstrate why I’m content with demanding the force of law to protect boys from unnecessary circumcision. Surgical amputation of an individual’s healthy tissue is harmful. There is a legitimate government interest in protecting individuals from harm. Libertarian principles as I understand them demand the protection of boys from unnecessary surgery, just as we protect girls. Surprisingly, I’m in the minority in my opinion. A comment on the second story at Hit and Run clarified for me what I believe is the key distinction necessary for parental rights:

I marvel that two people could have the foresight to take their daughter to a state with more liberal abortion laws while completely missing the fact you can’t force an adult to undergo unwanted surgical procedures.

Comment by: QuietReaderGirl at September 19, 2006 02:24 PM

But you can force a child to undergo unwanted surgical procedures. That’s too blunt, since strict enforcement of that as a rule would eliminate medically necessary surgery if the child decided against it. I’m arguing for sane interpretation of what a reasonable person would want. A sane person would choose life over death. But I contend that a sane person would choose a healthy foreskin over no foreskin, which is the right way to assess infant circumcision. (If he doesn’t, he still has the choice, but intact men don’t generally rush to undergo circumcision. My default assumption.) Routine circumcision is prevention without thought. It’s maddening.

The context of the second story provides a useful scenario. What would we think of parents who force their underage daughter to undergo an abortion she doesn’t want? Would a reasonable doctor perform it? Should a doctor perform it, if her parents deem it to be in her best interest based on statistics concerning teenage mothers or for any other reason they choose?

The idea is preposterous. Unwanted and unneeded surgery on boys is equally preposterous. Parental rights are not unlimited.

First link via Hit and Run.

Center for Dumb Conclusions?

Let’s all embrace the feel-good sentiments our government constantly provides:

All Americans between the ages of 13 and 64 should be routinely tested for HIV to help catch infections earlier and stop the spread of the deadly virus, federal health recommendations announced Thursday say.

“I think it’s an incredible advance. I think it’s courageous on the part of the CDC,” said A. David Paltiel, a health policy expert at the Yale University School of Medicine.

Encouraging the FDA to end its ban on blood donations by gay men would be courageous. This recommendation is an example of “more is always better” masquerading as good policy.

The recommendations aren’t legally binding, but they influence what doctors do and what health insurance programs cover.

Some physicians groups predict the recommendations will be challenging to implement, involving new expenditures of money and time for testing, counseling and revising consent procedures.

The idea is not terrible, but its implementation must be based in reality. Raise your hand if you think this will be implemented across the healthcare industry as a new routine. I’m sticking with No because we seem to have already figured out that our “limited” money and effort could be spent elsewhere. How stunning this suggestion isn’t is clear enough in this:

CDC officials have been working on revised recommendations for about three years, and sought input from more than 100 organizations, including doctors’ associations and HIV patient advocacy groups. The CDC presented planned revisions at a scientific conference in February.

Three years to suggest that everyone between 13 and 64 should be tested for HIV. Now raise your hand if you think that government-run healthcare is a good idea. Everyone gets tested for HIV, so someone misses out on a procedure or prevention relevant to her life. I’m sure our grand experiment with government-run (or financed, at a minimum) will be different from other countries, though, so no reason to worry.

Because some government busybody will suggest new public policy eventually, I’ll point this out now to save my ranting time later for rational issues:

Previously, the CDC recommended routine testing for those at high-risk for catching the virus, such as intravenous drug users and gay men, and for hospitals and certain other institutions serving areas where HIV is common. It also recommends testing for all pregnant women.

Some misguided do-gooder will add men with intact foreskins to that list. And I’m not really saving any ranting, because I’ll do it then, as well. Ugh.

Update: Looking over this post, it’s clear I forgot one thing, although I hope it was clear given my comments about what action would be courageous. Lumping gay men into the high-risk category by virtue of being gay is preposterous. Behavior matters. It’s small thinking that equates one with the other based solely generalizations from a generation ago.

An extremely long rebuttal

When I wrote this post, I hoped for a reply. Archie at Archontan responded with a few answers as to why male and female circumcision are not equivalent, which are important to him as a clarification that permits the former and not the latter. As you should expect, I disagree. This discussion requires two distinct lines of debate, but they run parallel and intersect in conclusion. I’ll deal with them separately in my attempt to address his response.

Before beginning my rebuttal, I must state that I understand Archie is not calling for universal circumcision of male infants in America. My responses are more geared to how some individuals have irresponsibly suggested that the findings of recent studies on the foreskin and HIV are as relevant to the United States as they are to sub-Saharan Africa. Archie has made the opposite claim, that his defense of male circumcision should not be read as a call for universal circumcision in America. It is an important note, one I made here. It bears repeating, as my arguments here are not meant as combative against Archie, or anyone else who supports parental choice regarding non-medically indicated circumcision, in this case to lower the risk of female-to-male HIV transmission through sexual intercourse. I aim only to refute the logic structure that supports such parental choice, particularly in the United States, but also in Africa. End of disclaimer.

First, the medical consideration for foreskin removal as an HIV preventative is incomplete. I do not mean to deny the findings of the study linking removal of the foreskin to reduced female-to-male HIV transmission. I accept that finding as reasonable conclusions; less skin, less exposure. As bizarre as implementation is, I’d be a fool to pretend otherwise. But the results are hardly unequivocal, as Archie challenges. From the study linked (indirectly) by Archie and (directly) by William Saletan, consider the conclusion on the number of HIV infections that routine circumcision could prevent in Africa:

This analysis is based on the result of just one RCT, but if the results of that trial are confirmed we suggest that MC could substantially reduce the burden of HIV in Africa, especially in southern Africa where the prevalence of MC is low and the prevalence of HIV is high. While the protective benefit to HIV-negative men will be immediate, the full impact of MC on HIV-related illness and death will only be apparent in ten to twenty years.

The line of demarcation in that paragraph is important. Too many want to focus on the projections, estimated based on the Auvert study. However, what’s stated before the first comma is vital. One randomized controlled trial does not provide scientific proof, so it’s premature to call the results unequivocal. Wishing is not enough. But I quibble over distractions.

The proper medical analysis must include the risks of circumcision. Like any surgery, these are real every time a doctor cuts into a patient’s flesh. With every circumcision the boy being cut faces the possibility of complications, including, but not limited to, excessive bleeding, infection (HIV included, since aseptic procedures aren’t common in Africa), penile damage, partial or complete amputation, and death.

The frequency of complications is open for discussion, but whatever the actual complication rate, they exist. I’ve been involved in discussions where those favoring circumcision comprehend “potential benefits and potential complications” as “potential benefits and potential complications.” No. Potential is the key word on each side. As such, a thorough cost/benefit analysis must be involved. How much will we spend treating those who get infected with HIV? How much will we spend circumcising every male? How much will we spend correcting surgical complications? How will men circumcised as infants view their complications, should any arise? Will the greater good of HIV-protection satisfy their objections? The list goes on. In the “circumcision prevents HIV” debate, it has not begun. We have intellectually punted the notion that male and female genitalia are qualitatively equal and deserve equal protection.

The ethical debate is where support for circumcision of non-consenting individuals for HIV prevention most readily fails. What is medically possible and what is medically acceptable are not the same thing. If the foreskin link to HIV bears out, we’ll readjust our present justifications, beyond that which has already occurred, and continue circumcising our infants. But why stop there? If we remove the breast tissue of infant girls, they’ll face a significant reduction in breast cancer. Considering it’s much more likely for a girl to face breast cancer in her lifetime than it is for a man to face any such catastrophic disease affecting his foreskin, there is medical validity for taking such an action.

That scenario is preposterous, and I do not intend it as a policy recommendation or anything beyond rhetorical. I intend it to show that life has risks inherent in normal anatomy. We chase potential problems without indication because we fear disease. We make assumptions not based in reality, allowing radical surgery to take hold as a valid response to what our friend’s cousin’s boss’s third ex-husband faced one time. It’s cultural stupidity for which boys, and boys alone, must sacrifice a healthy, functional part of their genitalia under the surgeon’s knife.

Rational thought exists. As Archie states:

In the West, there is a small population of girls and women who have had their clitoral hoods removed or modified for strictly medical reasons, due to congenital defects and other problems.

Congenital defects and other problems are all we allow as reason for female genital cutting. I do not believe anyone would disagree with that as ethically sound and a perfect limitation. Why is it not just as ethically sound to limit male circumcision to those infants with a congenital defect of the prepuce, or another foreskin problem that can’t be solved with less invasive means? It can’t be because we can medically prevent potential medical problems in the future, unless we wish to revisit the vicious circle of the infant mastectomy argument. I can imagine no scenario of non-medical necessity in which the child’s individual rights exclude his foreskin from this ethical evaluation.

When reading his original post, I did not believe that Archie suggested hoodectomy as a valid possibility for consideration, despite its obvious anatomical comparison. His preferred comparison is qualitatively logical:

Also, during intercourse that large surface area of mucosal tissue [inner mucosal surface of the foreskin] has prolonged exposure to the partner’s fluids and tissues. In female sexual anatomy, the vulnerable mucosal tissue with a large surface area and prolonged exposure to the partner’s fluids is not the clitoral hood but the vagina. In other words the vagina is, as far as HIV transmission is concerned, the functional analogue of the male foreskin. Besides male circumcision, there is no surgical means to signific
antly reduce the vulnerability of the receptive partner, whether female or male.

Again, duly noted, with agreement. But why is it the man’s duty to give up his foreskin to protect both of them? Neither of them has an excuse to abdicate responsibility to practice safe sex, whether through choosing monogamy or condoms, just because a doctor cut away his foreskin. Yet, if we assume the man must lose his foreskin at his parents whim, is it not reasonable to assume that they should decide whether or not to trim their daughter’s labia, since that could play a role in HIV infection? I know I’m venturing back into the comparisons between male and female circumcision that many dismiss, but the only criteria I read here is mucosal tissue directly involved in sexual intercourse. If that’s not narrow enough, all I can guess is that ease of access for the doctor’s scalpel is the vital deciding factor. If so, that’s dumb.

Granted, female genitalia is mostly internal, especially in infancy. But so is male genitalia. To circumcise a male infant, his foreskin must be forcibly separated from his glans. The synechiae keeping the two structures together will not separate naturally for several years at least. Where is the distinction that allows tearing the foreskin from the glans but prohibits meddling with female genitalia? The basic structure of the infant penis indicates that the foreskin is not meant to be retracted, probed, or amputated.

Carrying the anatomical structure back into the ethical realm, I wrote this last month:

Children do not engage in sex until well beyond the period in which they can be taught responsible behavior and an understanding of consequences. Their intact genitals do not expose them to HIV. They do not need to fret over whether or not condoms will provide them adequate protection. For each boy, HIV will not jump onto his penis, crawl in between his glans and foreskin, and burrow through the susceptible cells. His intact foreskin will not create a public health crisis.

Nor will it create a personal health crisis for the boy. So what’s the hurry?

I do not favor banning¹ male circumcision, for that position is far too generalized. I favor banning the forced circumcision or genital cutting of non-consenting individuals, male or female. Again, Archie stated that he is not calling for universal male circumcision. It is an important point, and one I did not miss, despite any such implications in this post. My primary focus is male infant circumcision in America, of course. What adults choose to do to their own body is up to them. If an intact adult male in America or Africa believes himself to be at risk for HIV because he is intact, and he thinks his foreskin isn’t worth the potential infection risk, he should have the surgery. That’s conveniently the best time, as well, since his foreskin has separated from his glans. He can provide input to his doctor on how much foreskin to take or leave, as well as how to treat his frenulum.

But no one has the right to impose circumcision on another, no matter how many men are lining up to have the surgery performed on themselves². With respect to infants, parents are guardians, not property owners. The quantitative comparison between male and female circumcision most often provides a tremendous disparity, which is why girls are protected in America. What is not recognized is their qualitative equivalence. Medically unnecessary surgery on a non-consenting individual is wrong, no matter how “minor” the procedure or well-intentioned the motive. The proper perspective is not what the circumcision might prevent. The proper perspective is what the child needs. He does not need genital surgery. Should the need arise with his future self, that is the time for him to make or not make that decision.

¹ This link is much more appropriate for the Ninth International Symposium on Circumcision, Genital Integrity, and Human Rights than the link Archie provides. As I said in my rebuttal to William Saletan’s recent Slate article, I attended the symposium. I consider myself qualified to judge the applicability of a news story about the symposium to the actual symposium. And if attending the symposium brands me a kook, so be it. My writings already indicate that I think outside the mainstream on this topic. I can still be correct outside the mainstream.

² I addressed this point in my rebuttal of Mr. Saletan.

A dose of overwrought fashionable blather

I missed this entry about circumcision while I was on vacation, but there is a specific point worth addressing¹. I’m paraphrasing, but the author concludes that male circumcision is acceptable because it has medical benefits and that it is not comparable to female circumcision. The author is wrong on both counts, for the many reasons I’ve discussed over the last year. But that’s not what I want to address. Specifically, this jumps out as the key point:

I favor the elimination of severe female genital mutilation, including clitoridectomy and Pharaonic circumcision (infibulation). But conventional circumcision of male babies is simply not the same thing. The female homologue of this practice would be the removal of the clitoral hood, which would confer no medical benefit.

My short response is simple: Please provide proof that removal of the clitoral hood (and female circumcision, in general) would confer no medical benefit.

That short response doesn’t necessarily clarify why that’s enough to challenge the statement, so I’ll explain. The Auvert study hypothesized that Langerhans cells in the foreskin permit easer HIV transmission from females to males. Given that Langerhans cells reside in mucosal membranes, of which female genitalia has an ample supply, is it foolish to believe that an intact clitoral hood could provide a transmission path for the disease in women? Would it be objectionable to remove the clitoral hood of female infants if we could prove a connection between those Langerhans cells and HIV transmission? Has anyone studied this, or is the question too objectionable?

Bottom line: I agree that female circumcision is an abomination. Even though the qualitative analysis is significant, I can ignore it for the moment and disqualify most forms of female circumcision from my argument. But I’ll leave removal of the clitoral hood, since the author clearly agreed that it’s equivalent. If the potential medical benefits justify ignoring any human rights claims for male circumcision, what’s different about female circumcision? Shouldn’t we study the effect of removing the clitoral hood in preventing transmission of HIV? If the results show an unequivocal benefit, a criteria male circumcision has not yet met, shouldn’t we not only permit, but also encourage, removal of the clitoral hood?

I support neither male nor female forced circumcision, as I’ve said many times, but if the answer to either of my last two questions is “no,” that warrants an explanation beyond because. I’ve explained my position. Expecting the same from those who are willing to allow surgical alteration of healthy (male) infants is reasonable.

¹ I would’ve commented at the original entry, but I do not have a blogger account. I’m not interested in registering for a blogger account.