eh, oh yeah. That's it! prosthetic foreskin...made out of titanium alloys, the same stuff they used on the space shuttles. :grin:
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Should every non circumzised penis stretch?
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lol, prostethic foreskin would be kinda neat
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In reply to:they guy who got cut at 14, will get over it.You could say the same thing about female genital mutilation...In reply to:The implications aren't life threatning....done under sterile conditions.I'm not saying that circumcision is as mutilating as FGM; I'm saying that your logic is deeply flawed.To AverageJoe: It may be true that Jesus was circumcised, but he realized it was a bad idea, and Paul fixed the rule book.
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BMOC: Since the subject of the penis and its integral foreskin are loaded with emotion, let me direct this discussion for a moment to another part of the anatomy, so that the issues might be addressed more calmly.Say, for instance, and for whatever strange cultural reason, that a fellow's thumbs were amputated at birth. He would grow to adulthood knowing only hands sans thumbs, and to him, that would be normal, especially if all or most of his friends had similarly lost their thumbs at birth. These men would all learn to function fairly effectively, as the muscles of their remaining fingers would be forced through use to compensate for the early loss of the thumb.To these men, anyone with a thumb would appear strange and peculiar. Some might even call the extra digits "ugly". And since they seem to function, thumbless, without apparent problem, why would they want to attempt to replace, somehow, the lost thumbs? At any rate, any such attempt would probably be onerous and time-consuming.If someone came along, however, suggesting that it would be preferable not to amputate the thumbs of infant children, their advice would not be meant to make thumbless men feel "bad". Every person feels as he is, and there is little that someone else can do to change long-established beliefs.However, if a child is born into a generally thumbless society and he is allowed to keep his thumbs, he may well grow to adulthood being taught how to use his hands and fingers according to the rules and conventions of the dominant, thumbless society. His thumb may hang, unused, until someone demonstrates to him how it can assist in grasping and feeling. Even if this gentle suggestion requires exercises and time to successfully achieve full thumb function, there is no harm done or implied criticism of others. Indeed, it would be preferable for parents and doctors to learn how to advise children at an early age in proper use of their thumbs, so that later exercises wouldn't be necessary. Don't you agree?Korydon