Or researchers just examine circumcised individuals and report the medical results (positive or negative). Just because the results don’t match your expectations, doesn’t make it pseudo-science. Not everyone is mutilated from childhood-adulthood. The world isn’t monolithic. Facts
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Replying to @maminapawa @dkingpower7
Interesting you mention results not matching expectations. We must remember
#circumcision as medicine is only about a century old; it has been a highly contested superstitious belief for much longer, 6,000 years or so. Religious belief may color expectations.#i21 reply 0 retweets 0 likes -
A conviction to defend what has been a highly contested religious ritual since the time of the Maccabees presents a conflict of interest with a genuine concern for science, research and public health. Religious convictions may color expectations, hence creationism.
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Just because results don’t match doesn’t expectations doesn’t make research pseudoscience, it’s true. But how do we know the “researchers” are only publishing “results” that fit their expectations? And refusing to publish results that conflict with their religious beliefs?
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There is a problem when the “reported medical results” fail to correlate with reality. (Lack of external validity.) And there is a problem when the most respected medical organizations look at these “results” and find them wanting.
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I come back to my original post; what are “researchers” looking for? Is it to solve a problem? To cure a disease? Or is it to safeguard and protect a contested superstitious ritual? There are already better ways to achieve the “benefits” circumcision is supposed to confer.
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Is the point of science to find newer, better ways to do things? Or to keep things the way they are? It should be obvious by now that the ongoing quest to vindicate
#circumcision is pseudoscience. It’s no different than “researchers” publishing the “merits” of bloodletting.#i23 replies 0 retweets 2 likes -
Other questions arise. How would we treat “research” and “trials” to find “medical benefits” in
#FGM? And how would we treat “studies” that actually found them?#i2 http://blog.practicalethics.ox.ac.uk/2017/08/does-female-genital-mutilation-have-health-benefits-the-problem-with-medicalizing-morality/ …2 replies 0 retweets 0 likes -
It looks like some people will not have any of it. Yes, talk about “expectations.”
#i2https://allafrica.com/stories/201106280259.html …2 replies 0 retweets 3 likes -
Replying to @Joseph4GI @dkingpower7
Lastly, it’s not just researchers, African women are actually SAYING we’re not negatively impacted by circumcision, and we know OUR bodies better than anyone. Just look at our cover photo/videos of women who reject the label “FGM.” Again, you’re choosing to deny facts/reality.
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It’s inconsistent to excuse male #circumcision on the grounds that “circumcised men can still enjoy sex and experience orgasm,” and oppose #FGM on the false grounds that it “eliminates a woman’s ability to orgasm,” when this demonstrably not true. #i2
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At least for me, how much a person can still orgasm after forced genital cutting is irrelevant. Women can enjoy sex after rape; rape would still be a horrific violation of her basic human rights. This has nothing to do with post-cut sexual enjoyment; it’s about human rights.
#i20 replies 0 retweets 1 likeThanks. Twitter will use this to make your timeline better. UndoUndo
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