Difference between revisions of "United States of America"

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Seventh-day Adventist [[John Harvey Kellogg]], M. D., of Battle Creek, Michigan was an important 19th century promoter of male circumcision. Dr. Kellogg believed that masturbation was immoral, sinful, caused one to think "impure" thoughts, which he believed was harmful to the brain. He believed that the urge to masturbate could be prevented by eating mild foods, for which purpose, he and his brother invented corn flakes.
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Seventh-day Adventist [[John Harvey Kellogg]], M. D., of Battle Creek, Michigan was an important 19th century promoter of male circumcision. Although masturbation is never mentioned in the Bible, Dr. Kellogg believed that masturbation was immoral, sinful, caused one to think "impure" thoughts, which he believed was harmful to the brain. He believed that the urge to masturbate could be prevented by eating mild foods, for which purpose, he and his brother invented corn flakes.
  
Dr. Kellogg perhaps is most famous for his book, ''Plain facts for young and old''.<ref name="Kellogg1888">{{REFbook
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Dr. Kellogg perhaps is most famous for his book, ''Plain facts for young and old'',<ref name="Kellogg1888">{{REFbook
 
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  |title=Plain Facts for Old and Young: Natural History and Hygiene of Organic Life (Sex, Marriage & Society Series)
 
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  |accessdate=2021-10-03}}</ref> in which he advocated circumcision of boys as punishment for masturbation.
  
 
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[[Category:USA]]

Revision as of 17:08, 3 October 2021

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This article is work in progress and not yet part of the free encyclopedia IntactiWiki.

 

The United States of America is also known as the United States or simply America or by acronyms such as USA or US or U.S.A. or U.S.. The United States is predominantly an English-speaking nation. As in other English-speaking nations, non-therapeutic circumcision of boys was popularized in the nineteenth century, however, the practice of non-therapeutic circumcision of boys is now in decline.

History

Jews have lived in America since before the Revolutionary War. They have always practiced ritual circumcision (Brit Milah) of boys on the eighth day of life in accordance with the Abrahamic covenant, however this was only for a very small percentage of the population.

One may be certain that the eighteenth century Founding Fathers of the United States of America were men with intact foreskins as were the foreskinned men who fought the American Civil War (1861-1865).

Non-therapeutic circumcision of males for non-religious reasons originated with Claude-Francois Lallemand in 1832 in France but soon spread to the United Kingdom in the early nineteenth century, from which it eventually spread to other English-speaking nations.

The first recorded non-religious circumcision of a boy in the United States occurred in 1870 when Lewis Albert Sayre circumcised a boy of five years of age for paralysis. Sayre then continued to advocate circumcision for numerous reasons until his death in 1900. According to Sayre, circumcision was recommended for paralysis, epilepsy, hernia, lunacy, curvature of the spine, and clubfoot.

Moses (1871) advocated circumcision to prevent masturbation.[1]

Seventh-day Adventist John Harvey Kellogg, M. D., of Battle Creek, Michigan was an important 19th century promoter of male circumcision. Although masturbation is never mentioned in the Bible, Dr. Kellogg believed that masturbation was immoral, sinful, caused one to think "impure" thoughts, which he believed was harmful to the brain. He believed that the urge to masturbate could be prevented by eating mild foods, for which purpose, he and his brother invented corn flakes.

Dr. Kellogg perhaps is most famous for his book, Plain facts for young and old,[2] in which he advocated circumcision of boys as punishment for masturbation.

References

  1. REFjournal Moses MJ. The value of circumcision as a hygienic and therapeutic measure. New York Medical Journal. November 1871; 14(4): 368-74.
  2. REFbook Kellogg, John Harvey (1888): Plain Facts for Old and Young: Natural History and Hygiene of Organic Life (Sex, Marriage & Society Series). Ayer Publishing. Retrieved 3 October 2021.