Religion is nuts

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  • Steven Russell
    replied
    It seems this thread has been derailed by circumcision issues. The original title was "Religion is Nuts".

    Many posters have said something along the lines of: I believe ABC but if others believe XYZ, that's fine.

    This all seems very civilized. We may have certain beliefs but still RESPECT others who do not share them.

    But wait a minute. Do we have the same level of respect for those who believe in ghosts, alien abductions, or bigfoot? There is at least as much evidence for all of these things (perhaps more) as there is for the existence of God.

    We have seen on other threads that religion can be a force for good as well as evil. But that is not the point. There is absolutely no credible evidence that God exists. This being the case, we need to try our best to make the world a better place without worrying about whether or not He would approve.

    Best,
    Steve.

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  • caz
    replied
    Originally posted by Phil H View Post
    And yet is that not what we are often told by doctors and scientists - re the MMR jab - don't have it and "X" will follow...

    ...And I ask this - if you thought a neighbour or a family member was doing something that seriously put her family, herself, her child, you, at risk, would you not DO something?
    Hi Phil,

    If I thought a parent known to me was denying their children the MMR jab, seriously putting them at risk along with any babies in the neighbourhood not yet old enough to get protected, I would certainly try to make them see sense.

    I’m not sure that’s quite the answer you were looking for, but then it was probably unwise to compare sound medical advice with faith-based threats of hell and damnation. It’s not even apples and oranges; more like apples and orang-utans.

    Love,

    Caz
    X

    Leave a comment:


  • Natalie Severn
    replied
    Originally posted by cappuccina View Post
    .Natalie/Norma - You are absolutely spot on!! I was to Whitechapel in 1989, and I absolutely loved it. My husband and I poked around a good bit of the East End. He took some FANTASTIC B&W pics that I would love to post someday, including the abandoned ragged school before it was made into condos, and all kinds of things we found...It's so incredibly rich with history, and you can still feel the presence of the thousands of people who used to live there...along with the vibrancy of the current inhabitants...

    I want to go back...
    Yes,yes Caps! Its something else -it really is.
    Would love to see your B&W pics!
    nx

    Leave a comment:


  • Stephen Thomas
    replied
    Bring back, bring back........

    My oneskin lies over my twoskin

    My twoskin lies over my three

    My threeskin lies over my fourskin

    So hack off my fourskin for me

    Leave a comment:


  • Errata
    replied
    Originally posted by c.d. View Post
    The book of Medical Malpractice cases that I looked at had some interesting stuff. A lot of cases where sponges were left in people after surgery and cases where the surgeon operated on the wrong limb. When I had knee surgery not too long ago, before I was taken into surgery, the surgeon wrote on the correct knee with a magic marker.

    c.d.
    Same thing happened to me when I blew out my left knee. The doctor writes "Right Knee" on my leg, and I start freaking out, but then he wrote "Wrong Knee" on my right leg.

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  • Robert
    replied
    Thanks to the practice, we have that great line : "When they circumcised you, they threw the wrong bit away."

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  • The Good Michael
    replied
    Originally posted by c.d. View Post
    Here is one of my favorite jokes:

    A man is walking down the street with an infant in his arms stopping to ask people where he can find a Mohel. He is directed to a store at the end of the street. There is a sign out front reading Mohel and in the window is a large clock. The man enters and asks the proprietor if he is a Mohel. When he answers yes, the man says “if you are a Mohel, how come you have a clock in the window? The Mohel says “so what would you put in the window?”

    c.d.
    Maybe a big pick, or a long bong?

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  • c.d.
    replied
    The book of Medical Malpractice cases that I looked at had some interesting stuff. A lot of cases where sponges were left in people after surgery and cases where the surgeon operated on the wrong limb. When I had knee surgery not too long ago, before I was taken into surgery, the surgeon wrote on the correct knee with a magic marker.

    c.d.

    Leave a comment:


  • c.d.
    replied
    Here is one of my favorite jokes:

    A man is walking down the street with an infant in his arms stopping to ask people where he can find a Mohel. He is directed to a store at the end of the street. There is a sign out front reading Mohel and in the window is a large clock. The man enters and asks the proprietor if he is a Mohel. When he answers yes, the man says “if you are a Mohel, how come you have a clock in the window? The Mohel says “so what would you put in the window?”

    c.d.

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  • cappuccina
    replied
    Johns - I completely agree with you that the procedure is much more difficult for older boys and men...I was referring to circumcising infants...

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  • Errata
    replied
    Originally posted by c.d. View Post
    Once at a law firm I worked on a case involving a botched circumcision on an infant. I had to do research on the average settlement in these types of cases. The research showed they occur with more frequency than you would think.


    c.d.
    Yeah I hear about botched circumcisions, although I have actually never heard of one happening at a Bris... only at hospitals.

    From what I understand, the tool mostly used at a Bris (which is kind of a u shaped instrument with the inner edges sharpened) seriously limits the amount of damage that can be done. Hospitals (and some Mohels) use a scalpel, so there's really no end of bad things that could happen.

    I suppose it's also possible than an audience would make a Mohel extra careful.

    Leave a comment:


  • Errata
    replied
    Originally posted by johns View Post
    It may not be a big deal when a boy is very young, but according to the guy who operated on me it becomes more of a problem the older the male is....

    I had to be "done" for medical reasons aged 25.... it was a right old performance...
    Do you wish that it had been done when you were an infant?

    Leave a comment:


  • c.d.
    replied
    Once at a law firm I worked on a case involving a botched circumcision on an infant. I had to do research on the average settlement in these types of cases. The research showed they occur with more frequency than you would think.

    I also had a front row seat for a circumcision. Jewish friends of mine who had a Rabbi perform the procedure in their home in front of invited guests. They invited some neighbors who had a young son about 11 or 12. They were not Jewish and the boy apparently had never heard of circumcision. Finally his curiosity got the better of him and he said in an astonished voice "they're doing WHAT to that baby?"

    c.d.

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  • johns
    replied
    Originally posted by cappuccina View Post
    ...it's not the "big deal" procedure you're making it out to be, truthfully...

    ..
    It may not be a big deal when a boy is very young, but according to the guy who operated on me it becomes more of a problem the older the male is....

    I had to be "done" for medical reasons aged 25.... it was a right old performance...

    Leave a comment:


  • cappuccina
    replied
    TGM...more unchecked facts, I'm afraid....my son's physician circumcised him for almost nothing, actually...it's not the "big deal" procedure you're making it out to be, truthfully...

    Michael, in the US and Canada, cicumcision usually costs between $100 and $400...that's it....

    Don't even ask me about male athletes who often don't bathe as much as they should anyway, and then, on top of that are uncircumcised.... bbbbbbbbbbbbllllllllllllllllllllleeeeeeeeeeeaaaaaa aaaaaaaahhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh...

    Natalie/Norma - You are absolutely spot on!! I was to Whitechapel in 1989, and I absolutely loved it. My husband and I poked around a good bit of the East End. He took some FANTASTIC B&W pics that I would love to post someday, including the abandoned ragged school before it was made into condos, and all kinds of things we found...It's so incredibly rich with history, and you can still feel the presence of the thousands of people who used to live there...along with the vibrancy of the current inhabitants...

    I want to go back...
    Last edited by cappuccina; 07-12-2011, 03:40 AM.

    Leave a comment:

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