Horizononfire:
Sorry if I’ve punched your buttons here but I don’t think you and I are really very far apart on this matter. The circumcision hypothesis was first proposed twenty years ago. Since then there has been a tremendous amount of research into HIV/AIDS, some good, some bad, some obviously politicized. In spite of this a lot has been learned and a lot of original myths regarding this tragic disease have been debunked. It seems that the debate on circumcision has gone back and forth and I would generally agree with you that it has been pretty inconclusive. The news here is that very recent high quality work appears to be supportive of the hypothesis and I am keeping an open mind and look forward to further reports and analysis. I am very interested to learn more about these recent findings and will carefully consider the sources but so far I am impressed that they have been of the highest caliber and have attempted to address the shortcomings of previous work on the subject.
My sources said the quote was Twain, but even if it was originally Disraeli, my purpose in using it was to point out that I share your healthy skepticism of all these sorts of studies. However, I do not share your cynicism that all such research on the subject is biased and beyond hope of any objectivity and usefulness. I believe that there is a lot of good work being done on this and many other controversial subjects. The number of ethical researchers out there who are primarily interested in objective results far outweigh the ones with obvious biases and agendas. Having said that I also happen to agree with Theodore Sturgeon that “Ninety percent of everything is crap” and a healthy degree of skepticism must be exercised in most matters. Whatever it shortcomings, without ‘epidemiology’ Dr. Snow might have never have discovered the connection between unsanitary water in a public well in the Soho district of London and a cholera outbreak in 1854.
I quite like your other quote from Diraeli as well and will endeavor to try and keep both in mind when thinking about any of these ‘studies’ in the future. Here’s another quote I like, also purportedly from Mark Twain: “A lie can travel half way around the world while the truth is putting on its shoes.” Let’s take a careful look at these new reports when they finally come out and measure them objectively against the previous studies and the standards that have been set for them in the Cochrane Review of three years ago that forms so much of the basis for the conclusions in the report you have cited in your link.
I think you and I would also agree that, regardless of the outcome of this research, circumcision is likely no more than a side show in the overall HIV epidemic. As to the African studies, maybe what we are seeing is really nothing more than the old adage for practicing safe penetrative sex and good personal hygiene; however, in regions without a predominance of these two characteristics circumcision just might make a difference. I am completely sympathetic for the very difficult implications this has for public health officials in these regions – maybe encouraging safer sex means encouraging more male circumcisions, not exactly a great answer but maybe a practical one nevertheless.
Fundamentally I think whether or not any INDIVIDUAL genetic male is circumcised has little to do with his own personal odds of contracting any STD. In the final analysis with respect to HIV, I believe that circumcision will largely be a matter of personal preference PROVIDED the genetic male in question has good personal hygiene and practices safe penetrative sex. My own personal hypothesis is that such a man may be at far less risk STATISTICALLY of contracting HIV than John Q. Public, perhaps even if they are as active sexually as a TS or male escort. [I’ll even go way out on a limb here and hypothesize that this might hold true even for ‘uncovered’ oral sex, so long as oral hygiene and health remains good and any oral sex on males is not to ‘completion’ (giving male oral sex without completion seems to be of relatively low risk, also quite possibly for a variety of sound pathological reasons).]
For example, there have even been studies which show the incidence of HIV/AIDS among various populations of prostitutes in developed or industrialized countries (who are not IDU) to be no worse and in some cases less than that of the general public – see this summary article http://www.thebody.com/cria/winter06/sex_workers.html. This is because “the public” represents a cross section of all people and will include, by definition, its share of IDU, unsafe sex practitioners, other unsanitary practices and accidental exposures. Personally I am far more worried when I see the U.S. Red Cross fined $5.7 million recently for violating blood-safety laws and the terms of a 2003 consent decree which settled charges that the Red Cross had committed “persistent and serious violations” of federal blood safety rules dating back 17 years – see http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/15925111/.
BTW I concede goethe’s point that an IDU that only uses clean needles is of no greater risk than anyone else for contracting HIV. I agree that it is unconscionable that clean needles are not as readily available in this country as they are elsewhere in the developed or industrialized world. This is probably a very important part of the reason that U.S. infection rates have been substantially above those in other industrialized countries. Horizononfire is also quite right with respect to his point about IDU, it may be the highest risk factor, but as I pointed out in my post “Still No Substitute for Safe Sex” above, it is a contributor in less than 20% of all newly reported cases of HIV/AIDS. Male-to-male sexual contact is the greatest single contributor with over half, or approximately 51%, of all newly reported cases (slide 7 in my link in the post above to the CDC’s “HIV/AIDS Surveillance - General Epidemiology” slide set).
Like you Horizononfire, I’ll continue to look skeptically at what I am told by public officials, scientists, academics, clergy and even TER hobbyists who may also have some self-interest at stake in their positions but I’ll also try to keep an open mind and will allow myself to be persuaded by a preponderance of reliable evidence and informed opinion. And yes that means taking even your opinions into serious consideration as I have a great deal of respect for your tenure and contributions to this forum. I agree that the jury is still out on the issue of HIV and male circumcision, but for me the fat lady is warming up her singing voice and the pigs are beginning to exercise their newly grown wings.
Respectfully submitted,
TS Tempted
-- Modified on 12/13/2006 9:28:03 PM