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JammieDodger said:I've thought that for a long time too, a major immigration of one population that digs circumcision must have occured... but I've always been stumped as to which culture it was and when they emmigrated...
I suppose it only takes one person to be circumcised at birth for others to have done the same for many generations to come... simply because that person will never understand what they're missing out on sexually. And the converse of that which occurs in places strongly against it. So maybe getting a whole culture to be pro-circumcision isn't so hard.
I don't think it has much to do with any particular group of immigrants. I think at some point, it is something that the American medical system decided to begin doing as a routine practice. The question, of course, would be when did that happen, and why did doctors decide to start doing that? What made them believe that it is "more hygienic" etc? (because that's usually the reason given for it by American doctors--although doctors in other countries would tell you that it doesn't make any difference in a person's hygiene).
Also, I think it's a myth that all Americans get circumsized. There are many parents who come here from other countries, have their children, and choose not to circumsize them. It's just that we tend to think of Americans as white, anglo peoples rather than as the people who have come here from other places and applied for citizenship, etc. I live on the East Coast, and where I live I see lots of people from Latin America, India, Thailand and China. While I've never gone around to survey people about it, I'd be willing to bet that if the countries they come from don't practice circumcision as a routine procedure they're unlikely to have chosen to do that for their sons who were born here.
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