Opinion In Medicine, the Morally Unthinkable Too Easily Comes to Seem Normal, 2024, Elliott

wingate

Senior Member (Voting Rights)
https://www.nytimes.com/2024/05/07/...e_code=1.qE0.p6-j.STaHvx7pZIgJ&smid=url-share

What is it that leads a rare individual to say no to practices that are deceptive, exploitative or harmful when everyone else thinks they are fine? For a long time I assumed that saying no was mainly an issue of moral courage. The relevant question was: If you are a witness to wrongdoing, will you be brave enough to speak out?

But then I started talking to insiders who had blown the whistle on abusive medical research. Soon I realized that I had overlooked the importance of moral perception. Before you decide to speak out about wrongdoing, you have to recognize it for what it is.
 
It should be illegal to operate on a person's genitals unless they consent, or it is medically necessary. This includes pelvic exams (not surgery but broadly similar), sterilization (which has been done non-consensually in the past), circumcision and other cosmetic genital surgeries, and "corrective" surgeries for intersex conditions. When not consensual, these are all medicalized, culturally sanctioned forms of sexual assault.
 
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