Cutting bits off people is assault.
No, it really isn't. Your silly rhetoric aside, almost nothing short of murder qualifies as assault if one has the consent of the target. That's why the defensive line of the Denver Broncos doesn't get arrested every time they crash into their opponents.
As for whether a newborn baby can consent, obviously he cannot. He cannot consent to anything. So, his parents hold the power of consent for him. If the parents consent to a circumcision, it is legally not assault - not in the US, not in Australia, and not most other places.
As to whether you think that parents should be able to consent to circumcision, that is not a legal issue. It's a political one. And, lucky for me, I have absolutely no interest in your political views whatsoever.
I have no problem with the removal of earlobes....they are pointless....off with the earlobes.I have no problem with circumcision, as long as it can be done with a local anesthesia.
In this country it's assault to smack a misbehaving child on the ankle. I find it hard to see how any legal system can see that as assault , but not see cutting bits off the same child as assault. So next time a kid screams , it's ok to cut her tongue out? If your point is that legal systems are often inconsistent, fair enough. we all accept that. I'm talking about reality here, not legal nicety.
I'm cool with parental rights to file their childrens teeth into points. How can I object to it and be ok with cutting off part of their penis?Some nice pointy teeth too?
[qimg]http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/2/20/Ota_Benga_1904.jpg[/qimg]
Your silly rhetoric aside, almost nothing short of murder qualifies as assault if one has the consent of the target.
Which is rather an important issue, where infant circumcision is concerned. If parents held the unlimited right to consent to an act of harm against their child, then - for example - brain damage due to shaking could not be prosecuted as an assault. Therefore, there are limits on the power of consent parents can be allowed to hold. And it seems axiomatic to me that the removal of healthy tissue, with no immediate medical justification, constitutes harm. Why, then, should parents be allowed to inflict unnecessary harm on their children in this way, given that they are not allowed to do so in others?
Dave
Why, then, should parents be allowed to inflict unnecessary harm on their children in this way, given that they are not allowed to do so in others?
And it seems axiomatic to me that the removal of healthy tissue, with no immediate medical justification, constitutes harm. Why, then, should parents be allowed to inflict unnecessary harm on their children in this way, given that they are not allowed to do so in others?
I'm not sure why it would seem axiomatic to you, as plain observation shows it to be nothing of the sort.
In any case, I neither know nor care why the line regarding what a parent can consent to falls on the side of allowing circumcision. It does. It will (in America, at least) never change.
Your questions are legally and politically meaningless.
Why, then, should parents be allowed to inflict unnecessary harm on their children in this way, given that they are not allowed to do so in others?
I'm not saying it's serious harm, but I can see no other way to classify the deliberate and medically unnecessary removal of healthy tissue without the consent of the subject.
They have the consent of the subject, by his agent. ...snip...
They have the consent of the subject, by his agent.
A newborn can't consent to anything, so you can end every single sentence regarding a baby with the same words, "without the consent of the subject."
I realise it may never change.