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→The next generation
Nature designs the foreskins of boys so that they will stay in position where its [[immunological and protective function of the foreskin| protective and immunological functions]] can be effective. Your infant son's [[foreskin]] may not retract for many years, perhaps not until after puberty, so no attempt should be made to retract it. Wash the outside of his [[foreskin]] like washing a finger. See [[care of intact, foreskinned boys]] for more information.
==What does the future hold?==
The percentage of boys who keep their [[foreskin]] has been very gradually increasing since 1965. We are now at a "tipping point".<ref>{{REFweb
|url=https://intactamerica.org/do-you-know-about-the-tipping-point/
|title=Do You Know: About the “Tipping Point?
|last=Chapin
|first=Georganne
|init=
|author-link=Georganne Chapin
|publisher=Intact America
|date=2016-11-01
|accessdate=2024-06-03
}}</ref> Although very unequally distributed geographically, the overall percentage of [[foreskinned]] newborn, infants, and toddlers is now about 50-50. As these young boys mature, one can expect to see more foreskins in schools and later in the general population.
==Finding other foreskinned guys==