Today I would like us to focus on the topic of cutting foreskin.. Many people do it and many believe it their tradition.. But as people we fail to understand that all these laws were man-made they were written down by some wise people of the Ancient times who claim to receive them from Higher spirit(God).
My question is why God created forskin at the first place if it was meant to be cut off? My good readers I mean no harm but I want to question things that is happening around us before we consider them as valid to be used by us... Researchers has proven that cutting your forskin is shortening your life on earth... You see some of the things in our bodies are there for some valid reasons like our hair.. These kind of wooly hair we have was created to protect us from the Afrikan heat of the Sun... Our hair are able to collect the energy from the Sun and transfare it to the Mind and the body... Our eyelashes we created to protect us from dust since Afrika have lot of dust when it month of July in Zulu language they even call it Ntulikazi... They is nothing that is in our bodies by mistake we must know that and also know they is consequences for abusing your body.
he foreskin
The human foreskin is a contiguous part of the skin system of the clitoris or penis.
In infant males, the foreskin is attached to the head of the penis (glans). The outer foreskin protects the more sensitive inner foreskin and the glans from abrasion and injury.
The moveable skin facilitates sexual pleasure. In fact, the foreskin is typically the most sensitive area of the penis.
When circumcised males lose sensitivity and skin mobility, it’s likely to significantly alter their sexual experience.
One recent Danish cross-sectional study concluded that male circumcision was associated with sexual difficulties for men and their female partners.
Bioethics of a non-treatment surgery on minors
Surgery without consent is ethical only in cases for:
1) incapacitated patients, in order to save their life
2) minors, with proxy consent from a parent or guardian, but only for surgery that addresses an underlying condition.
Excision of an infant’s foreskin for dubious medical or cultural purposes is an anomaly. Because it removes healthy, typically-developed tissue, the procedure fails to meet either of the above conditions.
Circumcision of minors also stands in contradiction to other medical ethics principles, including:
Avoiding causing needless harm
Promoting the patient’s medical well-being
Providing information on a procedure that a reasonable person would deem significant.
Complications
Circumcision can cause skin bridges, haemorrhaging, infection, as well as major penile damage.
Dozens of case studies describe severe complications, including penile amputations and death; several infant deaths have been reported in the past few years.
A Canadian Coroner’s report, issued in 2007 following the death of a baby in Ontario, recommended the Canadian Paediatric Society conduct a surveillance study on complications.
The most detailed assessment of circumcision complications cites meatitis (affecting 8% to 31% of those circumcised), infection (affecting between 0.4% and 10%, age varying) and many other severe complications.
A more recent British literature survey estimates complications, including infection and hemorrhage, at rates as high as 10%.
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