I find it very interesting that the same arguments for female genital cutting in Africa and male circumcision in the US are frequently given. It's cleaner, prevents infection, looks better, etc. I would like to say that I am not the person who started comparing male circumcision to FGM. I don't think they are on the same scale. The mildest form of FGM, where only the foreskin or hood of the clitoris is cut off, I think is pretty comparable to male circumcision, but the forms involving clitoridectomies are not. HOWEVER, if you read interviews w/ the doctors who do female circumcisions (and doctors do A LOT of these! Not everybody in Africa is poor, many live similar lives to what we do.) they'll tell you they do them for the same reasons they do it to males, it prevents infection. If you read interviews of mothers who had it done to their daughters, they'll ask how can you claim it hurts their sexuality? After all these women were circumcised and they still enjoy sex very much.
As for the person who wrote that a friend w/ an intact son got repeated infections, sorry, we've all heard those stories, but the fact is that's very rare. My oldest son did have repeated yeast infections for a short time, but he hasn't had a single one since his doc told me not to let him wash under his foreskin with soap and to not use bubble bath anymore. I think most parents who find their children have these problems have had doctors give them poor advice on the proper care of the intact penis. The foreskin should never be retracted by anyone but person on whose body the penis is found. If that person is not old enough to pull the foreskin back himself, it doesn't need to be done, and in fact, the foreskin is probably still fused to the head of the penis at that young age. Unfortunately, many doctors in this country still tell parents they need to (forcibly) retract their infant or toddler son's foreskin and clean under it w/ soap. This is really bad advice for several reasons. Number 1, it allows entry of foreign bacteria, and number 2, using soap on mucous membranes is irritating and also washes away the natural oils and antibodies found there, leading to an imbalance in the natural flora, which could lead to infection, either bacterial or yeast. And of course, bacterial infection leads to yeast b/c of antibiotics. That's a no brainer. But I'll tell ya, nobody better ever recommend cutting off MY genitals b/c I've had a bacterial infection followed by a yeast infection, both of which are much more common in women! And UTI? UTI's are extremely rare in boys, intact OR cicrcumcized. If a boy is getting repeat UTI's, it's time to look for stuctural problems internally. My second ds was born w/ an abnormality in one of his ureters and the hydronephrosis this caused. No one recommended circ as a cure, and he has never had a UTI.
As for the religious argument, I don't really want to go there. I can understand and respect the intense pressure to circ for religious reasons, and I do not hold it against people who do circ for these reasons. After all, we are a Jewish family, and our decision was a hard one. We don't regret it at all, but it has caused some arguments in the family and awkwardness at the synagogue (where we are among the more active familes.) It's definitely not easy to stand up to those pressures, and probably even harder to keep your mouth shut when you don't agree. BUT, if you are circ'ing for religious reasons, you don't need to find "other" reasons to justify it. If you are finding "other" reasons, perhaps medical, then I strongly suspect you are not really circumcizing for religious reasons. This is one of the reasons we decided not to circ. We realized that like most Jewish familes (non-Orthodox) our families didn't circ for actual religious reasons, it was more for medical or social reasons. And once the myths surrounding those reasons are dispelled, what reason is left to do it? A friend gave us this book: http://www.amazon.com/Questioning-Circu ... 0964489562 and pointed us to this article: http://www.doctorsopposingcircumcision. ... ition.html