IT'S OVER IF YOU ARE CIRCUMCISED (INSANE INFO) *DON'T CIRCUMCISE CHILDREN*

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vrilmaxxer

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Recently read this article on Psychology Today and it's pretty insane, SUMMERY AT THE BOTTOM
*First author is Patrick O’Connor, Psy.D.

As psychologists, we are deeply concerned by the recently announced CDC guidelines promoting circumcision for all males, and in particular children. The CDC guidelines are based on a sharply criticized 2012 policy statement by the American Academy of Pediatrics. The 2012 statement was condemned by a large group of physicians, medical organizations, and ethicists from European, Scandinavian, and Commonwealth countries as “culturally biased” and “different from [the conclusions] reached by physicians in other parts of the Western world, including Europe, Canada and Australia” (Frisch et al., 2013).

The new CDC guidelines highlight methodologically flawed studies from Africa that have no relevance to the United States. They chose to ignore studies that were conducted in the United States and show no link between circumcision and the risk of sexually transmitted diseases, including HIV (Thomas et al., 2004).

Worse, the CDC has completely ignored the psychological effects of genital cutting on male children.

This article outlines the psychological research that demonstrates the relationship between circumcision and psychological harm. The authors, along with other psychologists, have appealed to the CDC and Congress to reevaluate this policy in light of the psychological harm it will cause infants, children, and teens.

Psychological Effects on Infants
1. Circumcision Causes Immediate Harm

Circumcision is often performed on infants without anesthetic or with a local anesthetic that is ineffective at substantially reducing pain (Lander et al., 1997). In a study by Lander and colleagues (1997), a control group of infants who received no anesthesia was used as a baseline to measure the effectiveness of different types of anesthesia during circumcision. The control group babies were in so much pain—some began choking and one even had a seizure—they decided it was unethical to continue. It is important to also consider the effects of post-operative pain in circumcised infants (regardless of whether anesthesia is used), which is described as “severe” and “persistent” (Howard et al., 1994). In addition to pain, there are other negative physical outcomes including possible infection and death (Van Howe, 1997, 2004).

2. Pain from Circumcision in Infancy Alters the Brain

Research has demonstrated the hormone cortisol, which is associated with stress and pain, spikes during circumcision (Talbert et al., 1976; Gunnar et al., 1981). Although some believe that babies “won’t remember” the pain, we now know that the body “remembers” as evidenced by studies which demonstrate that circumcised infants are more sensitive to pain later in life (Taddio et al., 1997). Research carried out using neonatal animals as a proxy to study the effects of pain on infants’ psychological development have found distinct behavioral patterns characterized by increased anxiety, altered pain sensitivity, hyperactivity, and attention problems (Anand & Scalzo, 2000). In another similar study, it was found that painful procedures in the neonatal period were associated with site-specific changes in the brain that have been found to be associated with mood disorders (Victoria et al., 2013).

3. Infant Circumcision has Psychological Consequences for Men

Over the last decade there has been a movement of men who were circumcised as infants and have articulated their anger and sadness over having their genitals modified without their consent. Goldman (1999) notes that shame and denial is one major factor that limits the number of men who publicly express this belief. Studies of men who were circumcised in infancy have found that some men experienced symptoms of post traumatic stress disorder, depression, anger, and intimacy problems that were directly associated with feelings about their circumcision (Boyle, 2002; Goldman, 1999; Hammond, 1999).

Psychological Effects on Children and Adolescents
1. Medical Procedures in Childhood are Often Experienced as Traumatic

The CDC fails to consider that many medical procedures, even those that are described as routine, are often experienced as traumatic by children and adolescents (Levine & Kline, 2007). Circumcision, for example, clearly meets the clinical definition of trauma because it involves a violation of physical integrity. In fact, research has demonstrated that medical traumas in childhood and adolescence share many of the same psychological elements of childhood abuse, such as physical pain, fear, loss of control, and the perception that the event is a form of punishment (Nir, 1985; Shalev, 1993, Shopper, 1995).

2. Procedures Involving Children’s Genitals Produce Negative Psychological Effects

The psychological consequences of medical procedures are even greater when they involve a child’s genitals. Studies have examined the psychological effects of medical photography of the genitals (Money, 1987), repeated genital examinations (Money, 1987), colposcopy (Shopper, 1995), cystscopy and catheterization (Shopper, 1995), voiding cystourethrogram (Goodman et al., 1990), and hypospadias repair (INSA, 1994). The studies found that these procedures often produce symptoms which are very similar to those of childhood sexual abuse, including dissociation and the development of a negative body image. The effects often persist into adulthood as evidenced by a study that examined the effects of childhood penile surgery for hypospadias. Men who had this surgery in childhood experienced more depressive symptoms, anxiety, and interpersonal difficulties than men who did not have the surgery (Berg & Berg, 1983).

3. Circumcision Causes Significant Psychological Harm in Children and Adolescents

Circumcision in childhood and adolescence has significant negative psychological consequences. Following a traumatic event, many children experience anxiety, depression, and anger; and many others try to avoid and suppress these painful feelings (Gil, 2006). In addition, children often experience a debilitating loss of control that negatively affects their ability to regulate emotions and make sense of the traumatic experience (Van der Kolk, 2005). In a study of adults circumcised in childhood, Hammond (1999) found that many men conceptualized their circumcision experience as an act of violence, mutilation, or sexual assault. Kennedy (1986) detailed the psychological effects of circumcision in a case study describing the psychotherapy of a boy who was circumcised at three years of age. The sense of inadequacy, feelings of victimization, and violent sexual fantasies experienced during this boy’s adolescence were found to be both consciously and unconsciously linked to his experience with losing part of his penis (Kennedy, 1986). In a study examining the psychological effects of circumcision on boys between four and seven years of age, Cansever (1965) used psychological testing to measure boys’ level of distress. The results of the study indicated that circumcision was perceived as an aggressive attack on the body that left children feeling damaged and mutilated (Cansever, 1968). Cansever (1968) also noted that these boys experienced changes in body image (with many feeling smaller and incomplete), feelings of inadequacy and helplessness, as well as a tendency to withdraw psychologically.

4. The Majority of Boys Circumcised as Children and Adolescents Meet Diagnostic Criteria for Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD)

The most comprehensive study available that assesses the psychological impact of circumcision on children after infancy was conducted by Ramos and Boyle (2000) and involved 1072 pre-adolescent and adolescent boys who were circumcised in a hospital setting. Using an adapted version of a clinically established PTSD interview rating scale, the study’s authors determined that 51 percent of these boys met the full diagnostic criteria for PTSD and noted that other variables such as age at circumcision (pre-adolescence versus adolescence) and time elapsed since the procedure (months versus years) were not predictive of a PTSD diagnosis (Ramos & Boyle, 2000). As a point of comparison, the rate of PTSD among veterans of the Iraq war is approximately 20 percent (NIH, 2009).

5. By Encouraging Circumcision, Medical Professionals are Shaming Boys’ Bodies

If the CDC guidance is followed, medical providers will be communicating a psychologically damaging message to boys with intact genitals—that their penises are somehow “bad” or inferior. The negative effects of such communications have been studied with regard to intersex children and have been found to be frightening, shaming, and embarrassing to the child (Rusch et al., 2000). This is a particularly cruel message to send to adolescents, many of whom are already experiencing concerns regarding body image.

SUMMERY: The article emphasises the detrimental psychological repercussions of circumcision, especially on newborns and children. It emphasises that circumcision, which is frequently performed without proper anaesthesia, can cause acute injury as well as long-term pain sensitivity, leading to post-traumatic stress disorder, depression, and relationship troubles in some males circumcised as children. Furthermore, it contends that advocating circumcision sends a negative message to boys with intact genitals, potentially affecting their self-esteem and body image. In light of these psychological issues, the authors advocate for a reevaluation of the CDC guidelines.

SO IF YOU ARE CIRCUMCISED, YOU HAVE PTSD AND BAD EMOTION CONTROL = NO DARK TRIAD
 
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Mumbai basement science
 
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Recently read this article on Psychology Today and it's pretty insane, SUMMERY AT THE BOTTOM
*First author is Patrick O’Connor, Psy.D.

As psychologists, we are deeply concerned by the recently announced CDC guidelines promoting circumcision for all males, and in particular children. The CDC guidelines are based on a sharply criticized 2012 policy statement by the American Academy of Pediatrics. The 2012 statement was condemned by a large group of physicians, medical organizations, and ethicists from European, Scandinavian, and Commonwealth countries as “culturally biased” and “different from [the conclusions] reached by physicians in other parts of the Western world, including Europe, Canada and Australia” (Frisch et al., 2013).

The new CDC guidelines highlight methodologically flawed studies from Africa that have no relevance to the United States. They chose to ignore studies that were conducted in the United States and show no link between circumcision and the risk of sexually transmitted diseases, including HIV (Thomas et al., 2004).

Worse, the CDC has completely ignored the psychological effects of genital cutting on male children.

This article outlines the psychological research that demonstrates the relationship between circumcision and psychological harm. The authors, along with other psychologists, have appealed to the CDC and Congress to reevaluate this policy in light of the psychological harm it will cause infants, children, and teens.

Psychological Effects on Infants
1. Circumcision Causes Immediate Harm

Circumcision is often performed on infants without anesthetic or with a local anesthetic that is ineffective at substantially reducing pain (Lander et al., 1997). In a study by Lander and colleagues (1997), a control group of infants who received no anesthesia was used as a baseline to measure the effectiveness of different types of anesthesia during circumcision. The control group babies were in so much pain—some began choking and one even had a seizure—they decided it was unethical to continue. It is important to also consider the effects of post-operative pain in circumcised infants (regardless of whether anesthesia is used), which is described as “severe” and “persistent” (Howard et al., 1994). In addition to pain, there are other negative physical outcomes including possible infection and death (Van Howe, 1997, 2004).

2. Pain from Circumcision in Infancy Alters the Brain

Research has demonstrated the hormone cortisol, which is associated with stress and pain, spikes during circumcision (Talbert et al., 1976; Gunnar et al., 1981). Although some believe that babies “won’t remember” the pain, we now know that the body “remembers” as evidenced by studies which demonstrate that circumcised infants are more sensitive to pain later in life (Taddio et al., 1997). Research carried out using neonatal animals as a proxy to study the effects of pain on infants’ psychological development have found distinct behavioral patterns characterized by increased anxiety, altered pain sensitivity, hyperactivity, and attention problems (Anand & Scalzo, 2000). In another similar study, it was found that painful procedures in the neonatal period were associated with site-specific changes in the brain that have been found to be associated with mood disorders (Victoria et al., 2013).

3. Infant Circumcision has Psychological Consequences for Men

Over the last decade there has been a movement of men who were circumcised as infants and have articulated their anger and sadness over having their genitals modified without their consent. Goldman (1999) notes that shame and denial is one major factor that limits the number of men who publicly express this belief. Studies of men who were circumcised in infancy have found that some men experienced symptoms of post traumatic stress disorder, depression, anger, and intimacy problems that were directly associated with feelings about their circumcision (Boyle, 2002; Goldman, 1999; Hammond, 1999).

Psychological Effects on Children and Adolescents
1. Medical Procedures in Childhood are Often Experienced as Traumatic

The CDC fails to consider that many medical procedures, even those that are described as routine, are often experienced as traumatic by children and adolescents (Levine & Kline, 2007). Circumcision, for example, clearly meets the clinical definition of trauma because it involves a violation of physical integrity. In fact, research has demonstrated that medical traumas in childhood and adolescence share many of the same psychological elements of childhood abuse, such as physical pain, fear, loss of control, and the perception that the event is a form of punishment (Nir, 1985; Shalev, 1993, Shopper, 1995).

2. Procedures Involving Children’s Genitals Produce Negative Psychological Effects

The psychological consequences of medical procedures are even greater when they involve a child’s genitals. Studies have examined the psychological effects of medical photography of the genitals (Money, 1987), repeated genital examinations (Money, 1987), colposcopy (Shopper, 1995), cystscopy and catheterization (Shopper, 1995), voiding cystourethrogram (Goodman et al., 1990), and hypospadias repair (INSA, 1994). The studies found that these procedures often produce symptoms which are very similar to those of childhood sexual abuse, including dissociation and the development of a negative body image. The effects often persist into adulthood as evidenced by a study that examined the effects of childhood penile surgery for hypospadias. Men who had this surgery in childhood experienced more depressive symptoms, anxiety, and interpersonal difficulties than men who did not have the surgery (Berg & Berg, 1983).

3. Circumcision Causes Significant Psychological Harm in Children and Adolescents

Circumcision in childhood and adolescence has significant negative psychological consequences. Following a traumatic event, many children experience anxiety, depression, and anger; and many others try to avoid and suppress these painful feelings (Gil, 2006). In addition, children often experience a debilitating loss of control that negatively affects their ability to regulate emotions and make sense of the traumatic experience (Van der Kolk, 2005). In a study of adults circumcised in childhood, Hammond (1999) found that many men conceptualized their circumcision experience as an act of violence, mutilation, or sexual assault. Kennedy (1986) detailed the psychological effects of circumcision in a case study describing the psychotherapy of a boy who was circumcised at three years of age. The sense of inadequacy, feelings of victimization, and violent sexual fantasies experienced during this boy’s adolescence were found to be both consciously and unconsciously linked to his experience with losing part of his penis (Kennedy, 1986). In a study examining the psychological effects of circumcision on boys between four and seven years of age, Cansever (1965) used psychological testing to measure boys’ level of distress. The results of the study indicated that circumcision was perceived as an aggressive attack on the body that left children feeling damaged and mutilated (Cansever, 1968). Cansever (1968) also noted that these boys experienced changes in body image (with many feeling smaller and incomplete), feelings of inadequacy and helplessness, as well as a tendency to withdraw psychologically.

4. The Majority of Boys Circumcised as Children and Adolescents Meet Diagnostic Criteria for Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD)

The most comprehensive study available that assesses the psychological impact of circumcision on children after infancy was conducted by Ramos and Boyle (2000) and involved 1072 pre-adolescent and adolescent boys who were circumcised in a hospital setting. Using an adapted version of a clinically established PTSD interview rating scale, the study’s authors determined that 51 percent of these boys met the full diagnostic criteria for PTSD and noted that other variables such as age at circumcision (pre-adolescence versus adolescence) and time elapsed since the procedure (months versus years) were not predictive of a PTSD diagnosis (Ramos & Boyle, 2000). As a point of comparison, the rate of PTSD among veterans of the Iraq war is approximately 20 percent (NIH, 2009).

5. By Encouraging Circumcision, Medical Professionals are Shaming Boys’ Bodies

If the CDC guidance is followed, medical providers will be communicating a psychologically damaging message to boys with intact genitals—that their penises are somehow “bad” or inferior. The negative effects of such communications have been studied with regard to intersex children and have been found to be frightening, shaming, and embarrassing to the child (Rusch et al., 2000). This is a particularly cruel message to send to adolescents, many of whom are already experiencing concerns regarding body image.

SUMMERY: The article emphasises the detrimental psychological repercussions of circumcision, especially on newborns and children. It emphasises that circumcision, which is frequently performed without proper anaesthesia, can cause acute injury as well as long-term pain sensitivity, leading to post-traumatic stress disorder, depression, and relationship troubles in some males circumcised as children. Furthermore, it contends that advocating circumcision sends a negative message to boys with intact genitals, potentially affecting their self-esteem and body image. In light of these psychological issues, the authors advocate for a reevaluation of the CDC guidelines.


SO IF YOU ARE CIRCUMCISED, YOU HAVE PTSD AND BAD EMOTION CONTROL = NO DARK TRIAD
jews stole our fuckin foreskin its over for circumcels
 
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SO IF YOU ARE CIRCUMCISED, YOU HAVE PTSD AND BAD EMOTION CONTROL = NO DARK TRIAD
lol just mental health nothing more than else, meanwhile circumcised chad have low inhib + good mental health cuz of the constant validation he gets from foids
 
Dndr, but im half circumsized. Doctor stopped half way
 
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What is circum even for. Just cut some skin out of your newborn for leukemia brahh!1!!1
 
not my science nigger XDDDD
I saw this guy on an other circumcision thread saying that a study showing the impact of newborn circumcision on penile length was "performed in the streets of Bengaluru" or something like that. He's a weak minded coper simply ignore him.
 
jews stole our fuckin foreskin its over for circumcels
Jews circumcise more than most other nations.

You people always try to find reasons to blame the Jews
 
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Jhonny sins is curcumsized
 
Recently read this article on Psychology Today and it's pretty insane, SUMMERY AT THE BOTTOM
*First author is Patrick O’Connor, Psy.D.

As psychologists, we are deeply concerned by the recently announced CDC guidelines promoting circumcision for all males, and in particular children. The CDC guidelines are based on a sharply criticized 2012 policy statement by the American Academy of Pediatrics. The 2012 statement was condemned by a large group of physicians, medical organizations, and ethicists from European, Scandinavian, and Commonwealth countries as “culturally biased” and “different from [the conclusions] reached by physicians in other parts of the Western world, including Europe, Canada and Australia” (Frisch et al., 2013).

The new CDC guidelines highlight methodologically flawed studies from Africa that have no relevance to the United States. They chose to ignore studies that were conducted in the United States and show no link between circumcision and the risk of sexually transmitted diseases, including HIV (Thomas et al., 2004).

Worse, the CDC has completely ignored the psychological effects of genital cutting on male children.

This article outlines the psychological research that demonstrates the relationship between circumcision and psychological harm. The authors, along with other psychologists, have appealed to the CDC and Congress to reevaluate this policy in light of the psychological harm it will cause infants, children, and teens.

Psychological Effects on Infants
1. Circumcision Causes Immediate Harm

Circumcision is often performed on infants without anesthetic or with a local anesthetic that is ineffective at substantially reducing pain (Lander et al., 1997). In a study by Lander and colleagues (1997), a control group of infants who received no anesthesia was used as a baseline to measure the effectiveness of different types of anesthesia during circumcision. The control group babies were in so much pain—some began choking and one even had a seizure—they decided it was unethical to continue. It is important to also consider the effects of post-operative pain in circumcised infants (regardless of whether anesthesia is used), which is described as “severe” and “persistent” (Howard et al., 1994). In addition to pain, there are other negative physical outcomes including possible infection and death (Van Howe, 1997, 2004).

2. Pain from Circumcision in Infancy Alters the Brain

Research has demonstrated the hormone cortisol, which is associated with stress and pain, spikes during circumcision (Talbert et al., 1976; Gunnar et al., 1981). Although some believe that babies “won’t remember” the pain, we now know that the body “remembers” as evidenced by studies which demonstrate that circumcised infants are more sensitive to pain later in life (Taddio et al., 1997). Research carried out using neonatal animals as a proxy to study the effects of pain on infants’ psychological development have found distinct behavioral patterns characterized by increased anxiety, altered pain sensitivity, hyperactivity, and attention problems (Anand & Scalzo, 2000). In another similar study, it was found that painful procedures in the neonatal period were associated with site-specific changes in the brain that have been found to be associated with mood disorders (Victoria et al., 2013).

3. Infant Circumcision has Psychological Consequences for Men

Over the last decade there has been a movement of men who were circumcised as infants and have articulated their anger and sadness over having their genitals modified without their consent. Goldman (1999) notes that shame and denial is one major factor that limits the number of men who publicly express this belief. Studies of men who were circumcised in infancy have found that some men experienced symptoms of post traumatic stress disorder, depression, anger, and intimacy problems that were directly associated with feelings about their circumcision (Boyle, 2002; Goldman, 1999; Hammond, 1999).

Psychological Effects on Children and Adolescents
1. Medical Procedures in Childhood are Often Experienced as Traumatic

The CDC fails to consider that many medical procedures, even those that are described as routine, are often experienced as traumatic by children and adolescents (Levine & Kline, 2007). Circumcision, for example, clearly meets the clinical definition of trauma because it involves a violation of physical integrity. In fact, research has demonstrated that medical traumas in childhood and adolescence share many of the same psychological elements of childhood abuse, such as physical pain, fear, loss of control, and the perception that the event is a form of punishment (Nir, 1985; Shalev, 1993, Shopper, 1995).

2. Procedures Involving Children’s Genitals Produce Negative Psychological Effects

The psychological consequences of medical procedures are even greater when they involve a child’s genitals. Studies have examined the psychological effects of medical photography of the genitals (Money, 1987), repeated genital examinations (Money, 1987), colposcopy (Shopper, 1995), cystscopy and catheterization (Shopper, 1995), voiding cystourethrogram (Goodman et al., 1990), and hypospadias repair (INSA, 1994). The studies found that these procedures often produce symptoms which are very similar to those of childhood sexual abuse, including dissociation and the development of a negative body image. The effects often persist into adulthood as evidenced by a study that examined the effects of childhood penile surgery for hypospadias. Men who had this surgery in childhood experienced more depressive symptoms, anxiety, and interpersonal difficulties than men who did not have the surgery (Berg & Berg, 1983).

3. Circumcision Causes Significant Psychological Harm in Children and Adolescents

Circumcision in childhood and adolescence has significant negative psychological consequences. Following a traumatic event, many children experience anxiety, depression, and anger; and many others try to avoid and suppress these painful feelings (Gil, 2006). In addition, children often experience a debilitating loss of control that negatively affects their ability to regulate emotions and make sense of the traumatic experience (Van der Kolk, 2005). In a study of adults circumcised in childhood, Hammond (1999) found that many men conceptualized their circumcision experience as an act of violence, mutilation, or sexual assault. Kennedy (1986) detailed the psychological effects of circumcision in a case study describing the psychotherapy of a boy who was circumcised at three years of age. The sense of inadequacy, feelings of victimization, and violent sexual fantasies experienced during this boy’s adolescence were found to be both consciously and unconsciously linked to his experience with losing part of his penis (Kennedy, 1986). In a study examining the psychological effects of circumcision on boys between four and seven years of age, Cansever (1965) used psychological testing to measure boys’ level of distress. The results of the study indicated that circumcision was perceived as an aggressive attack on the body that left children feeling damaged and mutilated (Cansever, 1968). Cansever (1968) also noted that these boys experienced changes in body image (with many feeling smaller and incomplete), feelings of inadequacy and helplessness, as well as a tendency to withdraw psychologically.

4. The Majority of Boys Circumcised as Children and Adolescents Meet Diagnostic Criteria for Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD)

The most comprehensive study available that assesses the psychological impact of circumcision on children after infancy was conducted by Ramos and Boyle (2000) and involved 1072 pre-adolescent and adolescent boys who were circumcised in a hospital setting. Using an adapted version of a clinically established PTSD interview rating scale, the study’s authors determined that 51 percent of these boys met the full diagnostic criteria for PTSD and noted that other variables such as age at circumcision (pre-adolescence versus adolescence) and time elapsed since the procedure (months versus years) were not predictive of a PTSD diagnosis (Ramos & Boyle, 2000). As a point of comparison, the rate of PTSD among veterans of the Iraq war is approximately 20 percent (NIH, 2009).

5. By Encouraging Circumcision, Medical Professionals are Shaming Boys’ Bodies

If the CDC guidance is followed, medical providers will be communicating a psychologically damaging message to boys with intact genitals—that their penises are somehow “bad” or inferior. The negative effects of such communications have been studied with regard to intersex children and have been found to be frightening, shaming, and embarrassing to the child (Rusch et al., 2000). This is a particularly cruel message to send to adolescents, many of whom are already experiencing concerns regarding body image.

SUMMERY: The article emphasises the detrimental psychological repercussions of circumcision, especially on newborns and children. It emphasises that circumcision, which is frequently performed without proper anaesthesia, can cause acute injury as well as long-term pain sensitivity, leading to post-traumatic stress disorder, depression, and relationship troubles in some males circumcised as children. Furthermore, it contends that advocating circumcision sends a negative message to boys with intact genitals, potentially affecting their self-esteem and body image. In light of these psychological issues, the authors advocate for a reevaluation of the CDC guidelines.


SO IF YOU ARE CIRCUMCISED, YOU HAVE PTSD AND BAD EMOTION CONTROL = NO DARK TRIAD
Fuck islam satan mogs im not gonna circumcise my kids
 
I will never understand the extreme brain fog and delusion everyone seems to have over circumcision. Its genital mutilation through and through. And of course it reduces sensitivity, how do retards actually delude themselves otherwise?
 
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Nah, I'm going to get circumcised, foreskin flint is too annoying 🙄
 
stupid ass post, ask most women and they will agree circumcised is the best
 
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Yippity yappity shit the fuck up nigga
 
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I will never understand the extreme brain fog and delusion everyone seems to have over circumcision. Its genital mutilation through and through. And of course it reduces sensitivity, how do retards actually delude themselves otherwise?
They're weak minded and can't face the reality of what was done to them.
 
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Recently read this article on Psychology Today and it's pretty insane, SUMMERY AT THE BOTTOM
*First author is Patrick O’Connor, Psy.D.

As psychologists, we are deeply concerned by the recently announced CDC guidelines promoting circumcision for all males, and in particular children. The CDC guidelines are based on a sharply criticized 2012 policy statement by the American Academy of Pediatrics. The 2012 statement was condemned by a large group of physicians, medical organizations, and ethicists from European, Scandinavian, and Commonwealth countries as “culturally biased” and “different from [the conclusions] reached by physicians in other parts of the Western world, including Europe, Canada and Australia” (Frisch et al., 2013).

The new CDC guidelines highlight methodologically flawed studies from Africa that have no relevance to the United States. They chose to ignore studies that were conducted in the United States and show no link between circumcision and the risk of sexually transmitted diseases, including HIV (Thomas et al., 2004).

Worse, the CDC has completely ignored the psychological effects of genital cutting on male children.

This article outlines the psychological research that demonstrates the relationship between circumcision and psychological harm. The authors, along with other psychologists, have appealed to the CDC and Congress to reevaluate this policy in light of the psychological harm it will cause infants, children, and teens.

Psychological Effects on Infants
1. Circumcision Causes Immediate Harm

Circumcision is often performed on infants without anesthetic or with a local anesthetic that is ineffective at substantially reducing pain (Lander et al., 1997). In a study by Lander and colleagues (1997), a control group of infants who received no anesthesia was used as a baseline to measure the effectiveness of different types of anesthesia during circumcision. The control group babies were in so much pain—some began choking and one even had a seizure—they decided it was unethical to continue. It is important to also consider the effects of post-operative pain in circumcised infants (regardless of whether anesthesia is used), which is described as “severe” and “persistent” (Howard et al., 1994). In addition to pain, there are other negative physical outcomes including possible infection and death (Van Howe, 1997, 2004).

2. Pain from Circumcision in Infancy Alters the Brain

Research has demonstrated the hormone cortisol, which is associated with stress and pain, spikes during circumcision (Talbert et al., 1976; Gunnar et al., 1981). Although some believe that babies “won’t remember” the pain, we now know that the body “remembers” as evidenced by studies which demonstrate that circumcised infants are more sensitive to pain later in life (Taddio et al., 1997). Research carried out using neonatal animals as a proxy to study the effects of pain on infants’ psychological development have found distinct behavioral patterns characterized by increased anxiety, altered pain sensitivity, hyperactivity, and attention problems (Anand & Scalzo, 2000). In another similar study, it was found that painful procedures in the neonatal period were associated with site-specific changes in the brain that have been found to be associated with mood disorders (Victoria et al., 2013).

3. Infant Circumcision has Psychological Consequences for Men

Over the last decade there has been a movement of men who were circumcised as infants and have articulated their anger and sadness over having their genitals modified without their consent. Goldman (1999) notes that shame and denial is one major factor that limits the number of men who publicly express this belief. Studies of men who were circumcised in infancy have found that some men experienced symptoms of post traumatic stress disorder, depression, anger, and intimacy problems that were directly associated with feelings about their circumcision (Boyle, 2002; Goldman, 1999; Hammond, 1999).

Psychological Effects on Children and Adolescents
1. Medical Procedures in Childhood are Often Experienced as Traumatic

The CDC fails to consider that many medical procedures, even those that are described as routine, are often experienced as traumatic by children and adolescents (Levine & Kline, 2007). Circumcision, for example, clearly meets the clinical definition of trauma because it involves a violation of physical integrity. In fact, research has demonstrated that medical traumas in childhood and adolescence share many of the same psychological elements of childhood abuse, such as physical pain, fear, loss of control, and the perception that the event is a form of punishment (Nir, 1985; Shalev, 1993, Shopper, 1995).

2. Procedures Involving Children’s Genitals Produce Negative Psychological Effects

The psychological consequences of medical procedures are even greater when they involve a child’s genitals. Studies have examined the psychological effects of medical photography of the genitals (Money, 1987), repeated genital examinations (Money, 1987), colposcopy (Shopper, 1995), cystscopy and catheterization (Shopper, 1995), voiding cystourethrogram (Goodman et al., 1990), and hypospadias repair (INSA, 1994). The studies found that these procedures often produce symptoms which are very similar to those of childhood sexual abuse, including dissociation and the development of a negative body image. The effects often persist into adulthood as evidenced by a study that examined the effects of childhood penile surgery for hypospadias. Men who had this surgery in childhood experienced more depressive symptoms, anxiety, and interpersonal difficulties than men who did not have the surgery (Berg & Berg, 1983).

3. Circumcision Causes Significant Psychological Harm in Children and Adolescents

Circumcision in childhood and adolescence has significant negative psychological consequences. Following a traumatic event, many children experience anxiety, depression, and anger; and many others try to avoid and suppress these painful feelings (Gil, 2006). In addition, children often experience a debilitating loss of control that negatively affects their ability to regulate emotions and make sense of the traumatic experience (Van der Kolk, 2005). In a study of adults circumcised in childhood, Hammond (1999) found that many men conceptualized their circumcision experience as an act of violence, mutilation, or sexual assault. Kennedy (1986) detailed the psychological effects of circumcision in a case study describing the psychotherapy of a boy who was circumcised at three years of age. The sense of inadequacy, feelings of victimization, and violent sexual fantasies experienced during this boy’s adolescence were found to be both consciously and unconsciously linked to his experience with losing part of his penis (Kennedy, 1986). In a study examining the psychological effects of circumcision on boys between four and seven years of age, Cansever (1965) used psychological testing to measure boys’ level of distress. The results of the study indicated that circumcision was perceived as an aggressive attack on the body that left children feeling damaged and mutilated (Cansever, 1968). Cansever (1968) also noted that these boys experienced changes in body image (with many feeling smaller and incomplete), feelings of inadequacy and helplessness, as well as a tendency to withdraw psychologically.

4. The Majority of Boys Circumcised as Children and Adolescents Meet Diagnostic Criteria for Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD)

The most comprehensive study available that assesses the psychological impact of circumcision on children after infancy was conducted by Ramos and Boyle (2000) and involved 1072 pre-adolescent and adolescent boys who were circumcised in a hospital setting. Using an adapted version of a clinically established PTSD interview rating scale, the study’s authors determined that 51 percent of these boys met the full diagnostic criteria for PTSD and noted that other variables such as age at circumcision (pre-adolescence versus adolescence) and time elapsed since the procedure (months versus years) were not predictive of a PTSD diagnosis (Ramos & Boyle, 2000). As a point of comparison, the rate of PTSD among veterans of the Iraq war is approximately 20 percent (NIH, 2009).

5. By Encouraging Circumcision, Medical Professionals are Shaming Boys’ Bodies

If the CDC guidance is followed, medical providers will be communicating a psychologically damaging message to boys with intact genitals—that their penises are somehow “bad” or inferior. The negative effects of such communications have been studied with regard to intersex children and have been found to be frightening, shaming, and embarrassing to the child (Rusch et al., 2000). This is a particularly cruel message to send to adolescents, many of whom are already experiencing concerns regarding body image.

SUMMERY: The article emphasises the detrimental psychological repercussions of circumcision, especially on newborns and children. It emphasises that circumcision, which is frequently performed without proper anaesthesia, can cause acute injury as well as long-term pain sensitivity, leading to post-traumatic stress disorder, depression, and relationship troubles in some males circumcised as children. Furthermore, it contends that advocating circumcision sends a negative message to boys with intact genitals, potentially affecting their self-esteem and body image. In light of these psychological issues, the authors advocate for a reevaluation of the CDC guidelines.


SO IF YOU ARE CIRCUMCISED, YOU HAVE PTSD AND BAD EMOTION CONTROL = NO DARK TRIAD
It's over if you put so much stock in psychology. "PTSD", lol. "Depression", lol. What a crock of first world pussy ass bullshit.

Pain is good. Circumcision without anesthesia ain't gonna cause life long retardation unless you're gullible enough to believe in such crap and looking for reasons as to why you're such an emotionally unstable pussy.

Look at the ancient Spartans thrust into the agoge at the tender age of 5 or 6, where they would be mercilessly beaten and starved from day one. Then you have first world citizens of today who give weight to articles like this and wonder why females never find them attractive.
 
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dnrd, my dick has no sensation regardless of this text, takes 2-3 hours to cum, over for circumcisedcels
 
It's over if you put so much stock in psychology. "PTSD", lol. "Depression", lol. What a crock of first world pussy ass bullshit.
Here rolls in the tough guy.
Pain is good.
This is some next level cope.
Circumcision without anesthesia ain't gonna cause life long retardation unless you're gullible enough to believe in such crap and looking for reasons as to why you're such an emotionally unstable pussy.
You sound very emotionally unstable.
Look at the ancient Spartans thrust into the agoge at the tender age of 5 or 6, where they would be mercilessly beaten and starved from day one.
How is this a good thing ? Why would you want that done to you ? You're deeply mentally ill.
Then you have first world citizens of today who give weight to articles like this and wonder why females never find them attractive.
Women don't find you attractive based on physical characteristics. But keep thinking that your little act is gonna get you anywhere.


You're an absolute slave. You think that enduring what your masters do to you without complaining is something to be proud of.
You have the most feminine mentality on earth.
 
Here rolls in the tough guy.

This is some next level cope.

You sound very emotionally unstable.

How is this a good thing ? Why would you want that done to you ? You're deeply mentally ill.

Women don't find you attractive based on physical characteristics. But keep thinking that your little act is gonna get you anywhere.


You're an absolute slave. You think that enduring what your masters do to you without complaining is something to be proud of.
You have the most feminine mentality on earth.
The point is the Spartans were tough. People who frequent sites like this are supposed to be more based, yet they capitulate to so many ideas coming from the left.

I was circumcised in the 80's. Back then it was sliced off without any anesthetic. My son was circumcised in 2021. Now they tie a tight little rope around it and let it fall off over a series of days. I hate modern medicine and ideas.

Pain is good. It fosters not being a little bitch who believes in silly things like "depression" and "PTSD". The very thing YOUR MASTERS want us all to subscribe to.

They say that the average teenager today has the same levels of anxiety as a mental patient in the 1950's did. Why do you think that is? Could it be that we've been bombarded with placebos over the years through the media? Ideas of being way less mentally resilient than we actually are? Ideas that negative experiences are much bigger than they actually are?

Go to the third world and show me a person who's afraid to go outside and talk to people because of "anxiety". The idea wouldn't even compute.

Tough times. Strong men. Strong men. Good times. Good times. Stupid fucking luxurious ideas. Stupid fuckin luxurious ideas. Weak men.

Geddit?
 
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Over man. I need to get big dick and last long in order to not have totally subhuman dick
 
The point is the Spartans were tough. People who frequent sites like this are supposed to be more based, yet they capitulate to so many ideas coming from the left.
They weren't tough they were slaves. Actually tough people refuse to be ruled over, instead of embracing it like you do.
I was circumcised in the 80's. Back then it was sliced off without any anesthetic. My son was circumcised in 2021. Now they tie a tight little rope around it and let it fall off over a series of days. I hate modern medicine and ideas.
So to maintain the denial that you re in you genitally mutilated your son.
Pain is good. It fosters not being a little bitch who believes in silly things like "depression" and "PTSD". The very thing YOUR MASTERS want us all to subscribe to.
The little bitch to me is the one that can't face the truth and has to cower away or come up with some weird masculinity coper crap to deal with his trauma.
They say that the average teenager today has the same levels of anxiety as a mental patient in the 1950's did. Why do you think that is? Could it be that we've been bombarded with placebos over the years through the media? Ideas of being way less mentally resilient than we actually are? Ideas that negative experiences are much bigger than they actually are?
That's because of living online instead of IRL. And endocrine disruptors.
Go to the third world and show me a person who's afraid to go outside and talk to people because of "anxiety". The idea wouldn't even compute.
That's because they all live in big communities.
Tough times. Strong men. Strong men. Good times. Good times. Stupid fucking luxurious ideas. Stupid fuckin luxurious ideas. Weak men.

Geddit?
You don't know what good times are.
 
I always take pleasure in threads where I have an excuse to describe my pp

Its riddled with raised fordyce spots, bent to the left and slightly downwards. My ball hair is white, then as the hair works its way up, grey,auburn, orangeish, and then immediately cuts to black as it runs into my belly button.

1/3 of my dick and my left ball has lost all pigmentation, it immediately cuts to a pinkish white. I may have damaged it or something due to years of excessive death-grip, dry masturbation...
Not to mention im cut.... and there was a lot of foreskin cut off.
 
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Reactions: IAMNOTANINCEL
That's because they all live in big communities.
And they generally have good gut microbiomes while westerners don t because of all the vaccines and antibiotics that we get and they don't. They re physiologically less prone to mental disorders.
 
It's over if you put so much stock in psychology. "PTSD", lol. "Depression", lol. What a crock of first world pussy ass bullshit.

Pain is good. Circumcision without anesthesia ain't gonna cause life long retardation unless you're gullible enough to believe in such crap and looking for reasons as to why you're such an emotionally unstable pussy.

Look at the ancient Spartans thrust into the agoge at the tender age of 5 or 6, where they would be mercilessly beaten and starved from day one. Then you have first world citizens of today who give weight to articles like this and wonder why females never find them attractive.
Imagine what you could have been if you were not circumcised, if you had the mental ability to do as you wish, more confidence and intelligence, although I’m mirin the coping skills. Another things most boys are circumcised a few days after birth when I the brain is the freshest XD
 
If you get depression from having your dick skin chopped off you should off yourself
 
Imagine what you could have been if you were not circumcised, if you had the mental ability to do as you wish, more confidence and intelligence, although I’m mirin the coping skills. Another things most boys are circumcised a few days after birth when I the brain is the freshest XD
Oh my goodness dude. I'm as confident as can be around any group of people. Yes, I was circumcised a few days after birth. Broke my arm at 6, broke 3 fingers, broke a rib, been in countless fights from age 6 - 34, and have been stung by several bees at an early age. Oh deer!
 
Oh my goodness dude. I'm as confident as can be around any group of people. Yes, I was circumcised a few days after birth. Broke my arm at 6, broke 3 fingers, broke a rib, been in countless fights from age 6 - 34, and have been stung by several bees at an early age. Oh deer!
You are a old dude typing on a incel forum brah 😂😂😂
 
Recently read this article on Psychology Today and it's pretty insane, SUMMERY AT THE BOTTOM
*First author is Patrick O’Connor, Psy.D.

As psychologists, we are deeply concerned by the recently announced CDC guidelines promoting circumcision for all males, and in particular children. The CDC guidelines are based on a sharply criticized 2012 policy statement by the American Academy of Pediatrics. The 2012 statement was condemned by a large group of physicians, medical organizations, and ethicists from European, Scandinavian, and Commonwealth countries as “culturally biased” and “different from [the conclusions] reached by physicians in other parts of the Western world, including Europe, Canada and Australia” (Frisch et al., 2013).

The new CDC guidelines highlight methodologically flawed studies from Africa that have no relevance to the United States. They chose to ignore studies that were conducted in the United States and show no link between circumcision and the risk of sexually transmitted diseases, including HIV (Thomas et al., 2004).

Worse, the CDC has completely ignored the psychological effects of genital cutting on male children.

This article outlines the psychological research that demonstrates the relationship between circumcision and psychological harm. The authors, along with other psychologists, have appealed to the CDC and Congress to reevaluate this policy in light of the psychological harm it will cause infants, children, and teens.

Psychological Effects on Infants
1. Circumcision Causes Immediate Harm

Circumcision is often performed on infants without anesthetic or with a local anesthetic that is ineffective at substantially reducing pain (Lander et al., 1997). In a study by Lander and colleagues (1997), a control group of infants who received no anesthesia was used as a baseline to measure the effectiveness of different types of anesthesia during circumcision. The control group babies were in so much pain—some began choking and one even had a seizure—they decided it was unethical to continue. It is important to also consider the effects of post-operative pain in circumcised infants (regardless of whether anesthesia is used), which is described as “severe” and “persistent” (Howard et al., 1994). In addition to pain, there are other negative physical outcomes including possible infection and death (Van Howe, 1997, 2004).

2. Pain from Circumcision in Infancy Alters the Brain

Research has demonstrated the hormone cortisol, which is associated with stress and pain, spikes during circumcision (Talbert et al., 1976; Gunnar et al., 1981). Although some believe that babies “won’t remember” the pain, we now know that the body “remembers” as evidenced by studies which demonstrate that circumcised infants are more sensitive to pain later in life (Taddio et al., 1997). Research carried out using neonatal animals as a proxy to study the effects of pain on infants’ psychological development have found distinct behavioral patterns characterized by increased anxiety, altered pain sensitivity, hyperactivity, and attention problems (Anand & Scalzo, 2000). In another similar study, it was found that painful procedures in the neonatal period were associated with site-specific changes in the brain that have been found to be associated with mood disorders (Victoria et al., 2013).

3. Infant Circumcision has Psychological Consequences for Men

Over the last decade there has been a movement of men who were circumcised as infants and have articulated their anger and sadness over having their genitals modified without their consent. Goldman (1999) notes that shame and denial is one major factor that limits the number of men who publicly express this belief. Studies of men who were circumcised in infancy have found that some men experienced symptoms of post traumatic stress disorder, depression, anger, and intimacy problems that were directly associated with feelings about their circumcision (Boyle, 2002; Goldman, 1999; Hammond, 1999).

Psychological Effects on Children and Adolescents
1. Medical Procedures in Childhood are Often Experienced as Traumatic

The CDC fails to consider that many medical procedures, even those that are described as routine, are often experienced as traumatic by children and adolescents (Levine & Kline, 2007). Circumcision, for example, clearly meets the clinical definition of trauma because it involves a violation of physical integrity. In fact, research has demonstrated that medical traumas in childhood and adolescence share many of the same psychological elements of childhood abuse, such as physical pain, fear, loss of control, and the perception that the event is a form of punishment (Nir, 1985; Shalev, 1993, Shopper, 1995).

2. Procedures Involving Children’s Genitals Produce Negative Psychological Effects

The psychological consequences of medical procedures are even greater when they involve a child’s genitals. Studies have examined the psychological effects of medical photography of the genitals (Money, 1987), repeated genital examinations (Money, 1987), colposcopy (Shopper, 1995), cystscopy and catheterization (Shopper, 1995), voiding cystourethrogram (Goodman et al., 1990), and hypospadias repair (INSA, 1994). The studies found that these procedures often produce symptoms which are very similar to those of childhood sexual abuse, including dissociation and the development of a negative body image. The effects often persist into adulthood as evidenced by a study that examined the effects of childhood penile surgery for hypospadias. Men who had this surgery in childhood experienced more depressive symptoms, anxiety, and interpersonal difficulties than men who did not have the surgery (Berg & Berg, 1983).

3. Circumcision Causes Significant Psychological Harm in Children and Adolescents

Circumcision in childhood and adolescence has significant negative psychological consequences. Following a traumatic event, many children experience anxiety, depression, and anger; and many others try to avoid and suppress these painful feelings (Gil, 2006). In addition, children often experience a debilitating loss of control that negatively affects their ability to regulate emotions and make sense of the traumatic experience (Van der Kolk, 2005). In a study of adults circumcised in childhood, Hammond (1999) found that many men conceptualized their circumcision experience as an act of violence, mutilation, or sexual assault. Kennedy (1986) detailed the psychological effects of circumcision in a case study describing the psychotherapy of a boy who was circumcised at three years of age. The sense of inadequacy, feelings of victimization, and violent sexual fantasies experienced during this boy’s adolescence were found to be both consciously and unconsciously linked to his experience with losing part of his penis (Kennedy, 1986). In a study examining the psychological effects of circumcision on boys between four and seven years of age, Cansever (1965) used psychological testing to measure boys’ level of distress. The results of the study indicated that circumcision was perceived as an aggressive attack on the body that left children feeling damaged and mutilated (Cansever, 1968). Cansever (1968) also noted that these boys experienced changes in body image (with many feeling smaller and incomplete), feelings of inadequacy and helplessness, as well as a tendency to withdraw psychologically.

4. The Majority of Boys Circumcised as Children and Adolescents Meet Diagnostic Criteria for Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD)

The most comprehensive study available that assesses the psychological impact of circumcision on children after infancy was conducted by Ramos and Boyle (2000) and involved 1072 pre-adolescent and adolescent boys who were circumcised in a hospital setting. Using an adapted version of a clinically established PTSD interview rating scale, the study’s authors determined that 51 percent of these boys met the full diagnostic criteria for PTSD and noted that other variables such as age at circumcision (pre-adolescence versus adolescence) and time elapsed since the procedure (months versus years) were not predictive of a PTSD diagnosis (Ramos & Boyle, 2000). As a point of comparison, the rate of PTSD among veterans of the Iraq war is approximately 20 percent (NIH, 2009).

5. By Encouraging Circumcision, Medical Professionals are Shaming Boys’ Bodies

If the CDC guidance is followed, medical providers will be communicating a psychologically damaging message to boys with intact genitals—that their penises are somehow “bad” or inferior. The negative effects of such communications have been studied with regard to intersex children and have been found to be frightening, shaming, and embarrassing to the child (Rusch et al., 2000). This is a particularly cruel message to send to adolescents, many of whom are already experiencing concerns regarding body image.

SUMMERY: The article emphasises the detrimental psychological repercussions of circumcision, especially on newborns and children. It emphasises that circumcision, which is frequently performed without proper anaesthesia, can cause acute injury as well as long-term pain sensitivity, leading to post-traumatic stress disorder, depression, and relationship troubles in some males circumcised as children. Furthermore, it contends that advocating circumcision sends a negative message to boys with intact genitals, potentially affecting their self-esteem and body image. In light of these psychological issues, the authors advocate for a reevaluation of the CDC guidelines.


SO IF YOU ARE CIRCUMCISED, YOU HAVE PTSD AND BAD EMOTION CONTROL = NO DARK TRIAD
Dnrd women only care about length and girth (7.5 x 5.5)
 
You are a old dude typing on a incel forum brah 😂😂😂
Trying to help young people. I'm 36, been happily married for 5 years, and have a 2 year old son. My house is in order unlike the majority of Westerners.
 
Trying to help young people. I'm 36, been happily married for 5 years, and have a 2 year old son. My house is in order unlike the majority of Westerners.
You could have been a world leader if your penis was not mutilated, it’s okay though it is what it is. 🥹
 
You could have been a world leader if your penis was not mutilated, it’s okay though it is what it is. 🥹
Maybe I just didn't want to be. Did you ever think of that? Besides, lots of people who took over countries had "mutilated" dicks. King David, King Solomon, Osman the Great ect.

Was your foreskin chopped off? If not then what the fuck are YOU doing here? Why aren't YOU a world leader? If so, then you're just looking for something to explain away being such a pussy.
 
Women don't find you attractive based on physical characteristics. But keep thinking that your little act is gonna get you anywhere.
Funny GIF

JFL at the state of this forum :lul:
 
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Funny GIF

JFL at the state of this forum :lul:
Did you misunderstand what I was saying ? I was saying that the reason why women don t find someone attractive is based on their physical characteristics.
I agree that the articulation was bad but you could have understood what I meant based on context.
 
Did you misunderstand what I was saying ? I was saying that the reason why women don t find someone attractive is based on their physical characteristics.
I agree that the articulation was bad but you could have understood what I meant based on context.
Not really.
 
Maybe I just didn't want to be. Did you ever think of that? Besides, lots of people who took over countries had "mutilated" dicks. King David, King Solomon, Osman the Great ect.

Was your foreskin chopped off? If not then what the fuck are YOU doing here? Why aren't YOU a world leader? If so, then you're just looking for something to explain away being such a pussy.
I am a multi millionaire and soon to be a self made billionaire. I am also a harnesser of vril and future leader of the last battalion. You do not know me.
 
I am a multi millionaire and soon to be a self made billionaire. I am also a harnesser of vril and future leader of the last battalion. You do not know me.
You are an Indian living in Canada.
 
Circumsized males are more sadistic and evil especially during sex
 
the hoes don't gaf about mental health, circumcised is more aesthetic and lasts longer. This isn't cope either, I will never have sex so I'm impartial.
 
Not really.
Not really what ? Did I make a grammatical error ? I m ESL so Idk.
To me it is correct because :
I start with "they don t find you attractive" and then I explain why they don't find him attractive "based on physical characteristics".
I think literally only looks matter btw so it bothers me that someone would think I meant the opposite by reading what I wrote.
 

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