German Court rules religious circumcision a crime

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Re: German Court rules religious circumcision a crime

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Ultonius wrote:To tolerate circumcision for centuries and then suddenly, arbitrarily, decide to ban it just seems wrong to me. As I've asked before, if infant circumcision is so obviously, deeply wrong, why hasn't it been banned already, just like human sacrifice has?
So in 1850, you would have sided with the slave owners? "To tolerate slavery for thousands of years and then suddenly, arbitrarily decide to ban it just seems wrong to me. As I've asked before, if slavery is so obviously, deeply wrong, why hasn't it been banned already, just like human sacrifice has?"

Your argument seems to treat the status quo as a moral self-justification.
How many times do I have to say this? Circumcision and grossly debilitating mutilations such as sawing people's legs off are simply not in the same league. If you asked a number of religious Jewish men if they regretted being circumcised as babies, and if they would refrain from circumcising their own sons, I strongly suspect that the vast majority would say no.
What about cutting off an infant's ear, as I've mentioned several times? That's not debilitating.
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Re: German Court rules religious circumcision a crime

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Spoonist wrote:1) Kellogg's motivation was religious not scientific. Just likethe circumcision movement of the day which started the trend in the US. It was a time of heightened religious awareness in a contrasted response to the secular sciences. So while some of the arguments and style was copied from the scientific debate they were never motivated from it. So I'd argue that, nope, US justifaction for starting mass circumcisions was very religiuosly motivated. Just like the intertwined debates on evolution, prohibition, contraceptives and other religiously motivated morality issues of the day.
Thus I'd agree with you after the retconn, but I'd disagree before the retconn.
Kellogg used science (of a sort) both to help justify his religious bias and to engineer a more moral society. Hardly the first or last time that's been done in the US. I didn't say this was motivated by religion, I said religion was used to justify it. Then, as you note, there was some reconning over time. Either way, the use of science to support/justify circumcision in the Christian/secular US made an opening for science to support changing the practice when the scientific based view of circumcision changed.
Spoonist wrote:Hurr, hurr death penalty? Really? I know several jews (not from your nor german culture, so not 100% applicable, but still) who'd balk at even a short prison sentance or a heavy fine. Without any need at all to go into absurdium.
Some, but not all. Until the experiment is actually performed (outlawing all but medically necessary circumcision) none of us really know how this would play out. Sure, prison and/or fine will make some hesitate, but you'd have to weigh it against the prospect of actually being caught or prosecuted.
Spoonist wrote:Here I agree, it will be extremely difficult. Hence why rational discussion is paramount and my argument about compromises being a good start in the right direction without the culture clash that others are arguing for.
I think we're in agreement on that. Since we won't be able to completely eradicate the practice in a generation or less without instituting controls that may well be more damaging than the practice itself I'd argue for harm reduction. This upsets some people. I'm assuming it's because they think it CAN be quickly eliminated, or that the moral good of outlawing infant circumcision at any cost outweighs the moral bad that will result as collateral damage. To some extent these are differing opinions and thus can not be backed up by cites or evidence.
Spoonist wrote:
Broomstick wrote:On the upside, modern Jews tend to be law-abiding and can easily move to a location entirely sympathetic to their customs (Israel). Thus, I think most likely you'd see a migration of Jews out of Germany to elsewhere.
Here I think there is a big cultural difference. Now, I don't know that many german jews, but I do know some scandinavian ones. Most of them are not very big on Israel at all, quite the opposite. So I'd definately argue that while american jews would say such things. I do not think that german jews would actually immigrate to Israel in big numbers. Other places would be more natural.
Lots of aliyah from europe come back because Israel wasn't what they thought it would be.
I threw Israel out there because it's probably one of the easiest countries for a Jew to immigrate to. I'm familiar with the fact there are anti-Israel Jews out there, if only the rest of the world grasped that... however, that is a digression. Israel has been used as an intermediate stop while relocating to another location, this is another circumstance where that might occur.

If German Jews suddenly find Germany too oppressive due to outlawing infant circumcision they could seek to go elsewhere. If not Israel then perhaps the US, as another example.
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Re: German Court rules religious circumcision a crime

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Thanas wrote:
Broomstick wrote:I don't think you think this will reform all Jews, but based on some of the other comments in this thread I think that yes, some people might have that idea. I think the Jews will leave rather than change.
Based on what, concidering most jews are really loving living in Germany?
Because Jews have a multi-thousand year history of wandering, of going elsewhere, of moving around? They might love living in Germany now but if they find Germany oppressive (whether you agree with them on that point or not) why wouldn't they leave? German Jews aren't as tied to Germany as secular Germans are. Jews having divided loyalties or placing their tribal identity of "Jew" above their national identity are one of the reasons they have long been viewed as untrustworthy subjects, isn't it?
The intention is not to drive the Jews out of Germany, but that might well be the effect because I don't think the Jews are going to budge on that.
Funny – the descendants of former Germans (and closely related folks) who moved to my area due to religious persecution claim that they were slaughtered in the old country and that's why they came here rather than change, and why there are few to none of their sort back in Europe.
There has been no religious slaughter in Germany since the 17th century, except for the holocaust. I don't know what they were smoking but they clearly were lying.
They weren't lying - that IS when their German ancestors came to the US (well, British colonies). Yes, they've been holding a grudge for 300+ years but it did occur. As did the holocaust a mere 70 years ago. Germany does have periods of great tolerance, but they've also engaged in some very, very nasty intolerance. As I have said many times, I don't think this generation of Germans is likely to murder in the name of [insert intolerant ideology here] but given Germany history it's hardly a wonder that some folks are a little suspicious of long-term German tolerance. Nothing would make me happier than if Germany never commits such crimes again but it's going to take more than 70 years for folks to entirely relax in regards to Germans and capacity for oppressing others.
I am also very hard-pressed to find examples of religious prosecution that would result in death.
Other than what occurred in WWII, presumably. Granted, it's a highly unusual case but the devastation was also unusual. There's nothing surprising in some folks having a kneejerk reaction to any German law that restricts religious practices even if that knee is jerking all out of proportion to the given stimulus.
I don't know which is the case. You are mistaking a question for a positive assertion of fact. I am not familiar with Germany in great detail so I have no idea whether such a thing could be easily concealed or not. What if the parents simply never take the female child to a doctor? Would the authorities notice that and step in immediately or not? I don't know how these things work over there.
Then maybe you should educate yourself first instead of raising possibilities as counter-points to actual factual arguments.
Maybe you could answer the question? What would the effects be if a family simply never took a child to a doctor in Germany? Presumably there would be some record of the child's birth or existence, how much follow up does the government conduct to make sure the parents take the child to the doctor for check-ups, vaccinations, and so forth? How easy is it to take a kid off the medical radar?

Or do you object to me asking Germans about how their society and medical system works in an effort to educate myself? I figure you're a pretty good source of information, hence why I'm asking you, but if you don't care to answer then I'd be happy to hear from any other Germans in this thread.
True, however, male infant circumcision in Judaism isn't a “fundamentalist” or minority view, it's damn near universal even among the most moderate or reform groups.
So was the importance of the temple or Jerusalem.
Yes, but you can't build a temple on your kitchen table, you can do a circumcision there. Temples are large buildings that you can't really move around. Infant boys are very easy to transport to other locations where objectionable-to-outsiders surgical rituals can be performed. They aren't really that comparable.
The problem is that with the Jews it's entirely religious. Not just cultural, religious. They are brainwashed from birth to think of it not merely as an evil to be tolerated but a positive good. They are coming from an entirely different place on this than you are. The arguments that would work for you likely won't for them. There is nothing rational about this custom or their attempts to justify it, thus, as I have said, appealing to reason is highly unlikely to have an effect, neither will appeal to obeying the law, fitting into the larger culture, and so forth.
I like how you lump all jews in Germany into this "mass of zealots" thing.
It's a practice among 95%+ Jews. It's not a matter of zealotry. Infant male circumcision is arguably the closest thing to universal practice among Jews world wide. It's mainstream Judaism. The basis for it is not rational, therefore, reasoned arguments are unlikely to work except in a tiny minority of cases.

To non-Jews the practice is extreme. To Jews, it's normal. It's a pretty significant cultural difference.
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Re: German Court rules religious circumcision a crime

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Ultonius wrote:Was it an essential ritual of an ancient religious tradition that has been tolerated for centuries? The latter factor is the main reason I'm troubled by this court decision. To tolerate circumcision for centuries and then suddenly, arbitrarily, decide to ban it just seems wrong to me. As I've asked before, if infant circumcision is so obviously, deeply wrong, why hasn't it been banned already, just like human sacrifice has?
"arbitrarily ban circumcision"?
Do you even know what the word "arbitrary" means? Because it means "based on the subjective whim of an individuals opinion".
Which wasn't the case here. The constitution of Germany protects people from having their bodily integrity violated. Children are people too, and as i have explained (and you are evidently agreeing with), they are NOT the property of their parents. Parents do NOT get to violate and infants rights.
Ultonius wrote:How many times do I have to say this? Circumcision and grossly debilitating mutilations such as sawing people's legs off are simply not in the same league. If you asked a number of religious Jewish men if they regretted being circumcised as babies, and if they would refrain from circumcising their own sons, I strongly suspect that the vast majority would say no.
Are you daft?
How is asking practicing Jews whether they regret being circumcised evidence that someone who is no longer a believing Jew wouldn't regret being circumcised as an infant? Have you any idea how stupid that is? That's like evaluating a business by only asking the people who still go there, instead of the people who no longer go there.

If you look at circumcised people who are not part of a tightly-knit religious community (there are plenty of those in the United States), then you can find plenty who DO regret being circumcised without their consent.

Also, you are ignoring studies that show that circumcision actually does result in psychological harm.
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Re: German Court rules religious circumcision a crime

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Darth Wong wrote:
Broomstick wrote:Outlawing such practices as our culture finds abhorrent is not irrational. What's irrational is thinking you're going to abruptly change the culture of the practitioners.
When did I say that we would? I'm just saying that it should be done. Of course there will be resistance; so what? There's always resistance whenever you push up against bullshit.
Right. And there are frequently unintended consequences. I'm sure any one of us can pull out negative unintended consequences from enforced cultural change. Isn't that what the whole debate about the pros and cons of the so-called War on Drugs is about? Drugs laws were passed with the wholesome intention of trying to reduce the social and medical ills arising from drug abuse and addiction. Now, a few generations later, there is a sizable group arguing that the harmful consequences outweigh the harms those laws were passed to eliminate.

Since lopping off foreskins is not as intrinsically rewarding as snorting cocaine I don't think the unintended harms would be as extreme, and the side effects might be neutral rather than bad or good, but they will be there. If engineers of physical objects are held responsible for harm caused by those objects, intentional or not, shouldn't social engineers also be held responsible for the harm caused by their policies and laws, intended or not?
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Re: German Court rules religious circumcision a crime

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Broomstick wrote:
Darth Wong wrote:
Broomstick wrote:Outlawing such practices as our culture finds abhorrent is not irrational. What's irrational is thinking you're going to abruptly change the culture of the practitioners.
When did I say that we would? I'm just saying that it should be done. Of course there will be resistance; so what? There's always resistance whenever you push up against bullshit.
Right. And there are frequently unintended consequences. I'm sure any one of us can pull out negative unintended consequences from enforced cultural change. Isn't that what the whole debate about the pros and cons of the so-called War on Drugs is about? Drugs laws were passed with the wholesome intention of trying to reduce the social and medical ills arising from drug abuse and addiction. Now, a few generations later, there is a sizable group arguing that the harmful consequences outweigh the harms those laws were passed to eliminate.

Since lopping off foreskins is not as intrinsically rewarding as snorting cocaine I don't think the unintended harms would be as extreme, and the side effects might be neutral rather than bad or good, but they will be there. If engineers of physical objects are held responsible for harm caused by those objects, intentional or not, shouldn't social engineers also be held responsible for the harm caused by their policies and laws, intended or not?
Yes, but with the caveat that society is much too complex to reliably predict outcomes. I don't think the people who supported the War on Drugs would have foreseen today's outcome, or that they should be held responsible for it. I would pile much more responsibility on the people who could (and continue to) see those outcomes and yet persist in upholding the policy anyway.

I don't think it's reasonable to expect clairvoyance on the part of social engineers, or to discard the whole idea of social engineering (which, let's face it, all law is) just because we can't predict the future. But it is reasonable to say that if severe unforeseen consequences appear, then people should be willing to revisit past decisions, or they are complicit in the continuation of those consequences.
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Re: German Court rules religious circumcision a crime

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Gah! Massive typo - in part of post quoted below I originally said "religion" where I should have said "science":
Broomstick wrote:Kellogg used science (of a sort) both to help justify his religious bias and to engineer a more moral society. Hardly the first or last time that's been done in the US. I didn't say this was motivated by science, I said science was used to justify it.
I do hope that wasn't too confusing.
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Re: German Court rules religious circumcision a crime

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Ultonius wrote:Look, for a body modification, circumcision has relatively few negative effects. Circumcised men can have pleasurable sexual intercourse and father children, and if the circumcision was performed on them as infants, they have nothing to compare it to. Other decisions made by the parents on an infant's behalf may have consequences for them that are far more far-reaching than any relating to circumcision, so I just think that it's unfair to single circumcision out.
I don't see where this ruling singles out circumcision. It would seem to apply to ANY non-medically-necessary permanent alteration of a child's body. Thus, it would seem to apply to ritual face scarring, foot binding, and head binding, and those would all be equally outlawed. It's just that none of those are currently being practiced by anyone in Germany.
Ultonius wrote:Was it an essential ritual of an ancient religious tradition that has been tolerated for centuries? The latter factor is the main reason I'm troubled by this court decision. To tolerate circumcision for centuries and then suddenly, arbitrarily, decide to ban it just seems wrong to me.
I, too, object to the word “arbitrary” here. There is nothing arbitrary about the ruling, it is the result of a consistent moral stance of a society applied to law. If you allow an exception for IMC why “arbitrarily” allow that but not FGM of even the mildest form?

Sometimes, you have to ignore that feeling of wrongness and realize that the morally correct choice is the uncomfortable one. The Germans are actually acting in a consistent, not arbitrary, manner with this ruling.
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Re: German Court rules religious circumcision a crime

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Darth Wong wrote:Yes, but with the caveat that society is much too complex to reliably predict outcomes. I don't think the people who supported the War on Drugs would have foreseen today's outcome, or that they should be held responsible for it. I would pile much more responsibility on the people who could (and continue to) see those outcomes and yet persist in upholding the policy anyway.

I don't think it's reasonable to expect clairvoyance on the part of social engineers, or to discard the whole idea of social engineering (which, let's face it, all law is) just because we can't predict the future. But it is reasonable to say that if severe unforeseen consequences appear, then people should be willing to revisit past decisions, or they are complicit in the continuation of those consequences.
In the US, Prohibition was passed to deal with the evils of alcohol abuse and addiction, both perceived and actual. While it did accomplish the goal of reducing alcohol consumption by something like 1/2 it caused so many other problems that in only 13 years it was repealed. I think we can both agree that that was a proper reaction to unintended social harms.

The War on Drugs arguably started back in 1914 with the Harrison Narcotics Act. The results have not been good, nor have they been limited to the US. I think we're in agreement that so far the response to negative side effects of the War on Drugs has not been particularly wonderful.

So, here we are discussing the banning of non-medical circumcision of children. As you pointed out, we can't reliably predict the actions of the human herd. I do think, however, we can learn from other instances where there were attempts to ban cultural practices. Sometimes they can be eliminated by decree backed up with sufficient force. Sometimes they're driven underground. Sometimes they become more extreme as an act of defiance. The easier the practice is to conceal the more likely the latter two choices are to occur. Circumcision is something easily done in a kitchen (room stated purely as example, there are plenty of other places you could do one) by amateurs using readily available tools and the results are easily concealed by normal clothing. This will definitely complicate enforcement. Then there are the problems of adverse physical outcomes. If instead of 95%+ of male infants being circumcised the rate drops to, say, 80% that's a gain, but if the result is far more infections, complications, and non-functional genitalia then the harm done to the 80% is vastly magnified. Would that be worth it?

That is the rationale, in countries where the FGM rates are in the 80-90%+ categories, to promoting harm reduction rather than outright ban. The idea is that by moving the practice to sanitary hospitals rather than using dirty razors (or worse) in the boondocks you reduce the physical harm, and in the hospital context you can urge less extreme forms that do less long-term damage to the person. It's not as good as an outright cessation of the practice, of course, but a nicking of the clitoral hood is far preferable to our sensibilities than a Pharonic FGM and thus it's a step in the right direction. Is that really the best course to take? Well, it is controversial. The justification on a moral level is that even though you're not eliminating all harm you're greatly reducing the harm done. Like most compromises, no one is completely happy with it.

I suppose another parallel would be if the British, instead of outright banning the burning alive of widows, "settled" for "merely" branding them as a compromise: burn part of the women instead of the entire woman. On the other hand, my understanding is that suttee or sati was never as universal among Hindus as IMC is among Jews, it's not a particularly good parallel.
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Re: German Court rules religious circumcision a crime

Post by Ultonius »

Darth Wong wrote: So in 1850, you would have sided with the slave owners? "To tolerate slavery for thousands of years and then suddenly, arbitrarily decide to ban it just seems wrong to me. As I've asked before, if slavery is so obviously, deeply wrong, why hasn't it been banned already, just like human sacrifice has?"

Your argument seems to treat the status quo as a moral self-justification.
Slavery was largely abolished by the mid 19th century, partly because of Enlightenment ideas such as individual rights. Germany became a unified country in 1871, and was, on paper at least, a modern, progressive, post-Enlightenment nation-state. If infant circumcision is morally equivalent to slavery, why was it not banned in Germany at that time, long after slavery had become abhorrent to most of the world.
What about cutting off an infant's ear, as I've mentioned several times? That's not debilitating.
Isn't it? The external ear collects sound and helps you to tell what direction it is coming from. It's also a publically visible disfigurement, while circumcision isn't as obviously apparent in public, unless you're a naturist.
Serafina wrote:"arbitrarily ban circumcision"?
Do you even know what the word "arbitrary" means? Because it means "based on the subjective whim of an individuals opinion".
Which wasn't the case here. The constitution of Germany protects people from having their bodily integrity violated. Children are people too, and as i have explained (and you are evidently agreeing with), they are NOT the property of their parents. Parents do NOT get to violate and infants rights.
Broomstick wrote: I, too, object to the word “arbitrary” here. There is nothing arbitrary about the ruling, it is the result of a consistent moral stance of a society applied to law. If you allow an exception for IMC why “arbitrarily” allow that but not FGM of even the mildest form?

Sometimes, you have to ignore that feeling of wrongness and realize that the morally correct choice is the uncomfortable one. The Germans are actually acting in a consistent, not arbitrary, manner with this ruling.
That constitution has existed since 1949, and 'bodily integrity' is mentioned in Article 2, which I'm assuming is as old as the constitution itself. Why is circumcision only being banned now, over 60 years later? It's the timing that seems odd to me. However, I recognize that 'arbitrary' was a poor word choice, and I apologize for it.
Are you daft?
How is asking practicing Jews whether they regret being circumcised evidence that someone who is no longer a believing Jew wouldn't regret being circumcised as an infant? Have you any idea how stupid that is? That's like evaluating a business by only asking the people who still go there, instead of the people who no longer go there.

If you look at circumcised people who are not part of a tightly-knit religious community (there are plenty of those in the United States), then you can find plenty who DO regret being circumcised without their consent.

Also, you are ignoring studies that show that circumcision actually does result in psychological harm.
Very well then, what if the question were asked of circumcised Jewish men both practising and non-practising? I would guess that more than half of a randomly selected group would be at least nominally practising, and therefore probably happy about their circumcision. I'm also guessing that a fair number of regretful circumcised men in the USA (I should point out that I'm British, not American, by the way) are not Jewish, but were circumcised for fairly shaky medical reasons such as 'hygiene', which I do see as unjustifiable.
Broomstick wrote:I don't see where this ruling singles out circumcision. It would seem to apply to ANY non-medically-necessary permanent alteration of a child's body. Thus, it would seem to apply to ritual face scarring, foot binding, and head binding, and those would all be equally outlawed. It's just that none of those are currently being practiced by anyone in Germany.
I would still argue that circumcision is less debilitating and disfiguring than any of those customs, and that the effect is still to single out circumcision, since with the possible exception of face scarring in pre-medieval times, none of them have to my knowledge ever been practised in Germany, while Jews have lived in Germany for more than one and a half millennia and practised circumcision for all that time.
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Re: German Court rules religious circumcision a crime

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Ultonius wrote:
Broomstick wrote:I don't see where this ruling singles out circumcision. It would seem to apply to ANY non-medically-necessary permanent alteration of a child's body. Thus, it would seem to apply to ritual face scarring, foot binding, and head binding, and those would all be equally outlawed. It's just that none of those are currently being practiced by anyone in Germany.
I would still argue that circumcision is less debilitating and disfiguring than any of those customs, and that the effect is still to single out circumcision, since with the possible exception of face scarring in pre-medieval times, none of them have to my knowledge ever been practised in Germany, while Jews have lived in Germany for more than one and a half millennia and practised circumcision for all that time.
Head binding is probably less damaging than IMC. There is no indication that it causes any sort of loss of function, or impairment whatsoever unlike circumcision which does do things like permanently reduce sensitivity.

Head binding of a sort is still done for cosmetic reasons in the Western world - but there the intention is to reshape the head to something closer to the statistical norm. The search term to use to learn more is "plagiocephaly without synostosis", and one treatment for it is to make the kid wear a helmet 23 hours a day to reshape the growing skull. While there are some medical syndromes and extreme cases where there is an actual medical reason for this, most instances these days are for purely cosmetic reasons, and if the parents/caregivers could just be arsed to pick the kids up more often the problem is largely self-correcting, or even easily prevented. If this wasn't done the kids' brains would function just fine. It's just that kids tend to fit better into overall society when their heads aren't lopsided because people are such visually judgmental shaved apes.

So... is that a morally justified practice or not, altering the kids to make them conform to a purely cosmetic norm?
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Re: German Court rules religious circumcision a crime

Post by Serafina »

Broomstick wrote:Maybe you could answer the question? What would the effects be if a family simply never took a child to a doctor in Germany? Presumably there would be some record of the child's birth or existence, how much follow up does the government conduct to make sure the parents take the child to the doctor for check-ups, vaccinations, and so forth? How easy is it to take a kid off the medical radar?
First of all, it is impossible to keep your children out of school and homeschool them in Germany - you must either send them to public or an accredited private school.
And yes, some schools inquire about a child's doctor when they talk to the parents.

Second, a child has a right to see a doctor without the parents consent or knowledge from age 12 (IIRC) onwards. That can and is actually supported by CPS.
A young transwoman (14 years old) is given excuse from school once a month and is being paid a Taxi by CPS to visit her therapist. The reason is simply that her parents forbid her going to a therapist, despite her obviously being under great distress due to that. She phoned CPS, who talked to the parents, who still refused, so this arrangment was made (the parents do not know when exactly she goes there, so the only option would be to keep her out of school permanently, which is illegal).

Third, a few years back we had a large public outcry when several cases of child neglect which resulted in death became public. Since then (though also before, though a bit more lax) CPS is looking sharply for such instances, and not sending a child to the a doctor - ever - is obviously dangerous neglect.


Bottom line:
Yes, you COULD keep a child from ever going to the doctor. However, doing so would come with a high chance of getting caught and kissing your child custody goodbye.
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Re: German Court rules religious circumcision a crime

Post by Ralin »

Broomstick wrote:I suppose another parallel would be if the British, instead of outright banning the burning alive of widows, "settled" for "merely" branding them as a compromise: burn part of the women instead of the entire woman. On the other hand, my understanding is that suttee or sati was never as universal among Hindus as IMC is among Jews, it's not a particularly good parallel.
It was a practice confined to upper-class Hindu women. It affected a fraction of a percentage of the population, and it's not even clear how often it was involuntary.
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Re: German Court rules religious circumcision a crime

Post by Broomstick »

To Serafina's post: That level of oversight would make enforcement much more thorough than in some other places.

That makes me even more inclined to imagine a migration of Jews out of Germany. The Muslims would probably delay circumcision until age 12, then start applying a lot of family pressure to get the kid to consent.
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Re: German Court rules religious circumcision a crime

Post by Darth Wong »

Ultonius wrote:
Darth Wong wrote:So in 1850, you would have sided with the slave owners? "To tolerate slavery for thousands of years and then suddenly, arbitrarily decide to ban it just seems wrong to me. As I've asked before, if slavery is so obviously, deeply wrong, why hasn't it been banned already, just like human sacrifice has?"

Your argument seems to treat the status quo as a moral self-justification.
Slavery was largely abolished by the mid 19th century, partly because of Enlightenment ideas such as individual rights. Germany became a unified country in 1871, and was, on paper at least, a modern, progressive, post-Enlightenment nation-state. If infant circumcision is morally equivalent to slavery, why was it not banned in Germany at that time, long after slavery had become abhorrent to most of the world.
You completely missed the point. I was not saying that circumcision is morally equivalent to slavery. I was saying that your logic (ie- that you can't ban it because it's been around for a long time and has been legal up to now) could just as easily apply to slavery before it was abolished.
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Re: German Court rules religious circumcision a crime

Post by Serafina »

Ultonius wrote: If infant circumcision is morally equivalent to slavery, why was it not banned in Germany at that time, long after slavery had become abhorrent to most of the world.
Hey, dumbass, learn to read:

No one is saying that infant circumcision is EQUALLY abhorrent as slavery.
All we are saying is that it is an abhorrent, inhumane, barbaric practice.

Raping your wife wasn't banned until somewhat recently either. So was a husband forbidding his wife from working. So was beating your children (though not in the USA).
By your logic, those things are all fine and dandy and should never have been banned.
Heck, by your logic, slavery should never have been banned - with the simple argument "well if it is so obviously abhorrent, why wasn't it banned centuries ago?".
That constitution has existed since 1949, and 'bodily integrity' is mentioned in Article 2, which I'm assuming is as old as the constitution itself. Why is circumcision only being banned now, over 60 years later? It's the timing that seems odd to me. However, I recognize that 'arbitrary' was a poor word choice, and I apologize for it.
Gee, i don't know - maybe because society is becoming more enlightened than when the constitution was enacted in 1949? What's your point?
Oh, right, i forgot - you don't have any other than "well if it wasn't always illegal we shouldn't change that".

Very well then, what if the question were asked of circumcised Jewish men both practising and non-practising? I would guess that more than half of a randomly selected group would be at least nominally practising, and therefore probably happy about their circumcision.
Oh, hey, look at me - making things up about reality while ignoring the actual point! Aint i great!?

Way to miss the point. The point was simply that there is a chance that those circumcised without their consent might regret it and then can't reverse it.
Very well then, what if the question were asked of circumcised Jewish men both practising and non-practising? I would guess that more than half of a randomly selected group would be at least nominally practising, and therefore probably happy about their circumcision.
Where do you see the difference between doing it for the belief that it has medical benefits, as opposed to the belief that it will prevent an invisible spaceman from smiting you?
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Re: German Court rules religious circumcision a crime

Post by Ultonius »

Broomstick wrote: Head binding is probably less damaging than IMC. There is no indication that it causes any sort of loss of function, or impairment whatsoever unlike circumcision which does do things like permanently reduce sensitivity.

Head binding of a sort is still done for cosmetic reasons in the Western world - but there the intention is to reshape the head to something closer to the statistical norm. The search term to use to learn more is "plagiocephaly without synostosis", and one treatment for it is to make the kid wear a helmet 23 hours a day to reshape the growing skull. While there are some medical syndromes and extreme cases where there is an actual medical reason for this, most instances these days are for purely cosmetic reasons, and if the parents/caregivers could just be arsed to pick the kids up more often the problem is largely self-correcting, or even easily prevented. If this wasn't done the kids' brains would function just fine. It's just that kids tend to fit better into overall society when their heads aren't lopsided because people are such visually judgmental shaved apes.

So... is that a morally justified practice or not, altering the kids to make them conform to a purely cosmetic norm?
If the original head shape is quite far away from the norm, I suppose that it would be justified in order to help the child fit in. If the shape is only slightly different from the norm, it might not be justified. Would the German law interpret this kind of headbinding as a permissible necessary medical procedure, or as an illegal violation of the child's bodily integrity?

Serafina, Darth Wong et al: You know what, fine, I concede all the points. I'm not going to change anyone's mind, and I can't be bothered arguing any more. This is the last post I will be making in this thread. All I'll say is that I think enforcing this ruling will be harder than some people seem to think.
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Re: German Court rules religious circumcision a crime

Post by Darth Wong »

Ultonius wrote:Serafina, Darth Wong et al: You know what, fine, I concede all the points. I'm not going to change anyone's mind, and I can't be bothered arguing any more.
Yeah, yeah, this is the "I'm too good to waste time on you idiots" technique. We've all seen it before.

The problem is that your logic is inconsistent. You use a particular argument to defend circumcision and then bristle when I show that your logic could be applied exactly to slavery before it was outlawed. The fact that you can't convince me of your rightness is not the issue.
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Re: German Court rules religious circumcision a crime

Post by Ultonius »

Darth Wong wrote: Yeah, yeah, this is the "I'm too good to waste time on you idiots" technique. We've all seen it before.

The problem is that your logic is inconsistent. You use a particular argument to defend circumcision and then bristle when I show that your logic could be applied exactly to slavery before it was outlawed. The fact that you can't convince me of your rightness is not the issue.
Look, I am seriously regretting ever posting in this thread. If anyone's been an idiot here, it's me, and I see, in retrospect, that many of my arguments have been illogical and badly backed up. I just wanted to speak up for circumcision when so many people were condemning it, but I don't have any more arguments, so I'm asking you to please just accept my concession so I don't make an even bigger fool of myself.
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Re: German Court rules religious circumcision a crime

Post by Thanas »

Broomstick wrote:
Thanas wrote:Based on what, concidering most jews are really loving living in Germany?
Because Jews have a multi-thousand year history of wandering, of going elsewhere, of moving around? They might love living in Germany now but if they find Germany oppressive (whether you agree with them on that point or not) why wouldn't they leave? German Jews aren't as tied to Germany as secular Germans are. Jews having divided loyalties or placing their tribal identity of "Jew" above their national identity are one of the reasons they have long been viewed as untrustworthy subjects, isn't it?
Meh. Given the massive amounts of recources poured into Jewish life in Germany, I very much doubt they will up and leave. And if they do, that is their perfectly legitimate choice to make.
There has been no religious slaughter in Germany since the 17th century, except for the holocaust. I don't know what they were smoking but they clearly were lying.
They weren't lying - that IS when their German ancestors came to the US (well, British colonies). Yes, they've been holding a grudge for 300+ years but it did occur. As did the holocaust a mere 70 years ago.
The treaty of Westphalia, which pretty much killed off all religious violence perpetrated by states in Germany, happened in 1648. The first British colony in Jamestown only became a crown colony in 1624. What is their source for this happening? The early settlers were predominantly british, so from what great prosecution did these friends of yours flee from?
Germany does have periods of great tolerance, but they've also engaged in some very, very nasty intolerance. As I have said many times, I don't think this generation of Germans is likely to murder in the name of [insert intolerant ideology here] but given Germany history it's hardly a wonder that some folks are a little suspicious of long-term German tolerance. Nothing would make me happier than if Germany never commits such crimes again but it's going to take more than 70 years for folks to entirely relax in regards to Germans and capacity for oppressing others.
Meh. By that standard, they should be more wary of the nation they currently live in or form a new nation. I mean, I might just as well state that the USA has engaged in more repression over the past 70 years than Germany has over the same period etc. That is an extraordinarily bad argument to make here, going on Germanophobia even.

Maybe you could answer the question? What would the effects be if a family simply never took a child to a doctor in Germany? Presumably there would be some record of the child's birth or existence, how much follow up does the government conduct to make sure the parents take the child to the doctor for check-ups, vaccinations, and so forth? How easy is it to take a kid off the medical radar?

Or do you object to me asking Germans about how their society and medical system works in an effort to educate myself? I figure you're a pretty good source of information, hence why I'm asking you, but if you don't care to answer then I'd be happy to hear from any other Germans in this thread.
The reason I object to this is because you make a great deal of proclamations with very little fact to go on, then spam people with questions when they point out you are wrong instead of putting forward your own argument. So I'll just settle for this: Yes, it might be possible to hide your child if you want it to become a cellar kid which will never enter a school and will never work in his/her life. Religious fundies and hard-core Romani try this, but I doubt the same is true for 99% of jews living here.
Yes, but you can't build a temple on your kitchen table, you can do a circumcision there. Temples are large buildings that you can't really move around. Infant boys are very easy to transport to other locations where objectionable-to-outsiders surgical rituals can be performed. They aren't really that comparable.
Excuse me? The very part of the bonding with god, the center of the entire religion, the holy land, is not comparable to circumcision? That is a modern interpretation. WHich is my point. The jews changed back then, they can change now. Methods exist (like the little pricking of the penis etc. outlined above).
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Re: German Court rules religious circumcision a crime

Post by eyl »

Thanas wrote:Meh. By that standard, they should be more wary of the nation they currently live in or form a new nation. I mean, I might just as well state that the USA has engaged in more repression over the past 70 years than Germany has over the same period etc. That is an extraordinarily bad argument to make here, going on Germanophobia even.
We're talking about Jews specifically, who have reason to be wary of Germany specifically (justifiably or not).
Excuse me? The very part of the bonding with god, the center of the entire religion, the holy land, is not comparable to circumcision? That is a modern interpretation. WHich is my point. The jews changed back then, they can change now. Methods exist (like the little pricking of the penis etc. outlined above).
There was no alternative to the Temple, so there was no choice. In this case, they can move.

Also, wouldn't those alternatives also essentially run counter to the Constitutional principle here?
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Re: German Court rules religious circumcision a crime

Post by Ultonius »

Thanas wrote: The treaty of Westphalia, which pretty much killed off all religious violence perpetrated by states in Germany, happened in 1648. The first British colony in Jamestown only became a crown colony in 1624. What is their source for this happening? The early settlers were predominantly british, so from what great prosecution did these friends of yours flee from?


If the people Broomstick is talking about are descendants of the Pennsylvania Germans, also known as the Pennsylvania Dutch, then their migration during the late 17th and early 18th centuries was partly motivated by the French invasion of the Palatinate, the home of many of them, during the Nine Years' War/War of the Grand Alliance. Although this was not a religious conflict, I suppose that in folk memory it may have become mixed together with earlier religious persecutions. If they are also members of Anabaptist denominations, then their ancestors would still have had to fear religious persecution even after the Peace of Westphalia, since only Catholicism, Lutheranism and Calvinism were recognized as legitimate, protected faiths by that treaty.
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Re: German Court rules religious circumcision a crime

Post by Thanas »

eyl wrote:
Thanas wrote:Meh. By that standard, they should be more wary of the nation they currently live in or form a new nation. I mean, I might just as well state that the USA has engaged in more repression over the past 70 years than Germany has over the same period etc. That is an extraordinarily bad argument to make here, going on Germanophobia even.
We're talking about Jews specifically, who have reason to be wary of Germany specifically (justifiably or not).
No, that paragraph was about the "Germans" Broomstick referenced as fleeing to the USA and holding a grudge over 300 years later.
Excuse me? The very part of the bonding with god, the center of the entire religion, the holy land, is not comparable to circumcision? That is a modern interpretation. WHich is my point. The jews changed back then, they can change now. Methods exist (like the little pricking of the penis etc. outlined above).
There was no alternative to the Temple, so there was no choice. In this case, they can move.
Sure. But my point was that when faced with having no choice, Judaism adapts to the challenges raised to it. I don't think anybody disputed they can move and I suspect some might, but I bet the vast, vast majority will just revert to other practices like just pricking the penis.
Also, wouldn't those alternatives also essentially run counter to the Constitutional principle here?
I am confused. What do you mean here?
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Re: German Court rules religious circumcision a crime

Post by Serafina »

Probably to making a nick on the infants penis and then letting it scar over, thus marking it without actually removing the foreskin.

And yes, those would be illegal for pretty much the same reasons as circumcision - it still harms the infant, it still leaves a permanent mark, it's still medically unnecessary.

Acceptable alternatives would be holding off the circumcision until the boys Bar Mitzwah or later, or anything that is just a ceremony that does NOT involve violating the childs physical integrity.
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Re: German Court rules religious circumcision a crime

Post by Thanas »

Ultonius wrote:
Thanas wrote: The treaty of Westphalia, which pretty much killed off all religious violence perpetrated by states in Germany, happened in 1648. The first British colony in Jamestown only became a crown colony in 1624. What is their source for this happening? The early settlers were predominantly british, so from what great prosecution did these friends of yours flee from?


If the people Broomstick is talking about are descendants of the Pennsylvania Germans, also known as the Pennsylvania Dutch, then their migration during the late 17th and early 18th centuries was partly motivated by the French invasion of the Palatinate, the home of many of them, during the Nine Years' War/War of the Grand Alliance. Although this was not a religious conflict, I suppose that in folk memory it may have become mixed together with earlier religious persecutions.
That is a very good explanation - bad memories and people hilariously holding a grudge for no reason at all. Fled from war? They should be blaming the french, really.
If they are also members of Anabaptist denominations, then their ancestors would still have had to fear religious persecution even after the Peace of Westphalia, since only Catholicism, Lutheranism and Calvinism were recognized as legitimate, protected faiths by that treaty.
Hmmm. This might be an even better explanation - though I wonder about that one. Persecution there happened mostly in the 16th century and anabaptism never spread far into Germany after the destruction of the Augsburg circle in the 16th century. Most of the anabaptists seem to have fled the Netherlands and used Germany as a transit station so that might work as well for an explanation.


Serafina wrote:Probably to making a nick on the infants penis and then letting it scar over, thus marking it without actually removing the foreskin.

And yes, those would be illegal for pretty much the same reasons as circumcision - it still harms the infant, it still leaves a permanent mark, it's still medically unnecessary.
No, I don't think that it is. Let us not forget that it has to be a significant injury or harm. I doubt this will fall under the degree.
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