Hence, you appear arrogant by the way you portray your position as one of inherent "rightness" rather than one of many opinions, and you fail to acknowledge that this is not simply a black-and-white issue with one "correct" answer.
But it is.
Hence, you appear arrogant by the way you portray your position as one of inherent "rightness" rather than one of many opinions, and you fail to acknowledge that this is not simply a black-and-white issue with one "correct" answer.
This may be how you feel, but nothing gives you the right to assume your perspective is the only "correct" one and everyone else is just in denial. That's the height of arrogance.
Of course! Before I type what I think do I have to say "I think," or can't we all just assume that if type "cheese is nasty" that ThankQ thinks cheese is nasty, and he's not making a statement about the absolute truth of cheese?
You're basically telling me I'm arrogant for having my own idea.
I never proclaimed anything as absolute truth.
Your "opinion" was nevertheless full of objectively-styled statements:
To do that requires 100% wisdom, reflection, honesty, accountability and personal strength and conviction to truth, not to mention abandoning a belief.
Few, few, few people have this much strenght and clarity of thought. While an honest person has no choice but to look at the body of evidence and conclude that this is an ancient tradition that is beyond barbaric, a person who values belief over evidence cannot be moved.
Reading between the lines, you are essentially saying "anyone who disagrees with me is unwise, incurious, dishonest, unaccountable, weak, and not dedicated to truth." By extension, you are indicating that you do possess these qualities.
Hence, you appear arrogant by the way you portray your position as one of inherent "rightness" rather than one of many opinions, and you fail to acknowledge that this is not simply a black-and-white issue with one "correct" answer.
While an objective observer has little choice but to look at the body of evidence and conclude that this is an ancient tradition that is beyond barbaric, a person who values belief over evidence cannot be easily moved.
I dunno, I mean didn't we have someone in this thread say they had it done with one kid and not the other? Maybe I made that up or read it somewhere else. But I don't think it's that impossible for a parent to say "You know, I'm not sure that was the right decision and if I had it to do over again, I might not do it."
Hence, you appear arrogant by the way you portray your position as one of inherent "rightness" rather than one of many opinions, and you fail to acknowledge that this is not simply a black-and-white issue with one "correct" answer.
But it is.
I dunno, I mean didn't we have someone in this thread say they had it done with one kid and not the other? Maybe I made that up or read it somewhere else. But I don't think it's that impossible for a parent to say "You know, I'm not sure that was the right decision and if I had it to do over again, I might not do it."
Certainly not impossible. But that sounds like a person who can be moved by evidence and isn't locked into a belief.
I dunno, I mean didn't we have someone in this thread say they had it done with one kid and not the other? Maybe I made that up or read it somewhere else. But I don't think it's that impossible for a parent to say "You know, I'm not sure that was the right decision and if I had it to do over again, I might not do it."
Certainly not impossible. But that sounds like a person who can be moved by evidence and isn't locked into a belief.
Those people aren't all that rare! If you think it is, you've been on the internets too long.![]()
Hence, you appear arrogant by the way you portray your position as one of inherent "rightness" rather than one of many opinions, and you fail to acknowledge that this is not simply a black-and-white issue with one "correct" answer.
But it is.
Nonsense. If it was, we wouldn't have threads with hundreds of posts about it.
But it is.
Nonsense. If it was, we wouldn't have threads with hundreds of posts about it.
I couldn't figure out if he throwing his voice behind my idea or if he was anticipating I was going to have a "duck season, wabbit season" reply.
I assumed he was mocking me, but that may be because second grade runs strong in this one![]()
Certainly not impossible. But that sounds like a person who can be moved by evidence and isn't locked into a belief.
Those people aren't all that rare! If you think it is, you've been on the internets too long.![]()
Add that to the fact that I live in Oklahoma, and I think you've it figured out![]()
I don't know if I'm the one you're referring to, Kestra. I did say that my older son came to us circumcised and I left the decision whether to circumcise my younger son (who came out of me, obviously, uncircumcised) to my husband. The fact is, it was six of one, half-dozen of the other. It wasn't important enough to me to have an opinion. Honestly, the whole Judeo-Christian religious aspect had some resonance, but didn't carry the day. My husband had other ideas, and even he went back and forth about it. In the end, he decided against.I dunno, I mean didn't we have someone in this thread say they had it done with one kid and not the other? Maybe I made that up or read it somewhere else. But I don't think it's that impossible for a parent to say "You know, I'm not sure that was the right decision and if I had it to do over again, I might not do it."
I just noticed this. Going back, I see your younger son is 9. I just wanted to mention that, before the onset of puberty, the foreskin is usually attached to the glans, and usually should not be "retractable" (said like that, it sounds like something out of WolverineDo I feel that my older son is horribly mutilated? No, of course not. Do I feel that my younger son is unhygenic or dirty. No, although, as I said, his tight foreskin might end up giving him problems in the future.
I don't know if I'm the one you're referring to, Kestra.
I was born in 1961 and not circumcised. My brother was born in 1968 and my mother had him circumcised because it was the prevalent belief at the time that it was more hygienic. My next brother was born in 1978 and was not circumcised, because the hygienic belief had been debunked by then and my mother regretted circumcising my other brother.I dunno, I mean didn't we have someone in this thread say they had it done with one kid and not the other? Maybe I made that up or read it somewhere else. But I don't think it's that impossible for a parent to say "You know, I'm not sure that was the right decision and if I had it to do over again, I might not do it."
Thanks for the information, but the ER doctors and specialists did a pretty good job of explaining it to me. My son's case was not normal, and they're the ones who noted that we might have to do something about it in the future. And I don't believe I ever said whether my husband is circumcised or not, so, yeah, your assumptions are faulty.I just noticed this. Going back, I see your younger son is 9. I just wanted to mention that, before the onset of puberty, the foreskin is usually attached to the glans, and usually should not be "retractable" (said like that, it sounds like something out of WolverineDo I feel that my older son is horribly mutilated? No, of course not. Do I feel that my younger son is unhygenic or dirty. No, although, as I said, his tight foreskin might end up giving him problems in the future.). In fact, during infant circumcision, the foreskin has to be more or less "ripped" from the glans, exposing the raw mucous skin. In an uncut penis, the foreskin will detach slowly before sexual maturity. It is not advised to forcefully retract the foreskin if it has not naturally detached yet: not necessarily harmful, but it could be uncomfortable or painful (forcible retraction of the foreskin).
Now, since your husband is cut, and your older son is cut, it stands to reason there isn't a lot of, uh, experience in dealing with an uncut penis in your household, and what you could consider a "tight foreskin" is actually perfectly normal.
I would say that doctors would know the difference, but in places where the vast majority of people are circumcised (given that you like in such a place), well, I'm not sure. Sorry to intrude and make assumption about your personal life, but I just wanted to be sure you had all the information.
Heh. Better to err on the side of caution.
That's definitely not what he meant...
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