Rose,
You said that your philosophy is Live and let live.
You are using this "philosophy" for justifying the right to mutilate your new-born son in accordance with cultural traditions,
why not, instead,
Use it to justify the right for your new-born to have an intact body which conforms to its genetic blueprint rather than mutilating it in accordance with cultural tradition?
Does "live and let live" mean protecting pathological cultural practices? Or does it mean allowing that which is natural to prevail?
It can mean either, depending on circumstance.
If it was forced on non religious families who didn't want it, then yes I would argue it shouldn't be forced on families who don't want it.
Even if there were some marginal health benefits.
What I object to most is people forcing their own ways on others.
As far as I can see the circumcision of boys has less of an impact than is made out. 80% of boys were circumcised in the USA.
The risks obviously weren't as high as people claim.
However, it was in a way forced on families of boys, so I don't hold with that either.
IMO it's marginal, as to health benefits vs risk. There is no one answer fits all. Which why I am on the side of people who are having the choice taken away by others.
It should be a parental choice, given that the medical authorities don't seem to think the risk is great enough for an outright ban, ( like FGM) so we should stop trying to force all people to all be the same.
Also to many people use it to attack people of religion, labelling them barbaric etc etc.
The hatred of their religion is quite noticeable.
I look at it, take into account the medical reasoning ( remembering it was considered reasonable to circumcise 80% of boys in the USA) try and separate the religious prejudice.
From that I have decided that whether parents do or don't, should be something they decide for their own son ( not a lot of prejudiced busybodies).
It's having the freedom for parents to decide what is best for their son. For them to have a choice at all they can't be dictated to. ( this works with male circumcision because it's borderline)
As a parallel look at abortion.
Some people disagree very strongly with that, so much so even rape cases can't have one. There is a risk with abortions too, and the expelled foetus has no chance to give consent, and where people consider a baby becomes a person varies from person to person.
My choice is the same as with circumcision.
No one should have an abortion forced on them, and no one should stop someone who desperately wants one. The medical authorities set what they think is ethical.
My answer is that those who are against it, shouldn't have one, but people who do,should be able to make their own choices.
To do that, the law has to allow people to make their own choices.
People might disagree strongly with their choices, but the choices need to be there.
What I am against is people interfering in other people's choices on matters I consider marginal where I feel the people who it concerns should have a large say.
In this case, we are arguing male circumcision. I think it should be up to the parents.
Just like I think abortion should be up to the parents ( or in that case the woman, although there is some argument that in some cases men should have a say).
It isn't as inconsistent as some people would like to make out.
I'm against people forcing their own choices on others, and I tend to stand up for those I feel are having it forced on them.
To allow a choice with abortion I have to be pro choice, even if in my heart I'm more pro life in most cases.
For me it's about being free to have an opinion and act on it. For people to be free to make their own choices within medical boundaries.
People think I'm inconsistent, but actually I'm not.
I'd prefer society not to dictate certain things, male circumcision and abortion are just two of them.
I'm sure someone here will dig up some extreme example, thereby missing the whole point about it being about freedom and choice and a balance.
It's a middle path that allows for diversity of opinion where possible. It's about not judging people as barbaric just because the belong to a religion, but it's also about not allowing the religious to create laws that restricts the rights of others choices, like with abortion.
It's about an individuals freedom, within certain bounds to decide and act on their own conscience.
Whether they are religious or not.