Male Circumcision Bill Proposals Submitted to Congress, California Legislature
MGMbill.org announced that it submitted its male genital mutilation bill proposals to Congress and the California State Legislature for consideration. Both bills would amend current laws that protect girls from circumcision but not boys – a situation that a growing number of people believe is a violation of the equal protection clause of the Fourteenth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution.
SAN DIEGO, CA (PRWEB) March 30, 2004 -- MGMbill.org announced that it
submitted its male genital mutilation bill proposals to Congress and the
California State Legislature for consideration. Both bills would amend current
laws that protect girls from circumcision but not boys – a situation that a
growing number of people believe is a violation of the equal protection clause
of the Fourteenth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution.
The proposed bills
were faxed to each member of Congress and the California State Legislature on
February 23rd, with the exception of 22 legislators whose fax machines were
unreachable. MGMbill.org enlisted the services of a Washington, D.C., lobbying
support firm to coordinate the faxing task (638 faxes in all), with the
remaining 22 members receiving their bills via email.
Matthew Hess,
President of San Diego based MGMbill.org, said he hopes to find a few
sympathetic lawmakers who will agree to sponsor his bills. "Somewhere in the
halls of government there are legislators who know that circumcision is very,
very wrong," said Hess. "Genital mutilation is an issue that both political
parties should be able to come together on to address, and I hope that some of
our elected leaders are willing to step forward and sponsor this legislation.
Boys are entitled to the same legal protection from circumcision as girls under
the Fourteenth Amendment, but the law as it is currently written protects only
girls.”
Both of Hess’s bills would also provide protection from genital
mutilation to intersex children, and would increase the maximum imprisonment
time for an offense to 14 years (from the current 5 - 7 years).
“Intersex
people are a widely misunderstood group,” said Hess. “After all, most of us were
taught that there are only two sexes – male and female. But in reality sex is
sometimes measured in degree, and intersex people have a right to keep their
genital organs intact the same as other children. Through education and
understanding, the world can learn to accept intersex people as they are - the
same way we learned to accept those of different races, colors, and sexual
orientations.”
Hess concedes that he faces a challenge in getting his
bills passed. “There will be opposition to these bills,” he acknowledged. “But
if neither bill passes this year, then I will be back next year, and the year
after that. This is the beginning of a long term effort.”
MGMbill.org is
not alone in its opposition to male genital mutilation. March 30th marks the
eighth anniversary of the passage of the U.S. Female Genital Mutilation Act of
1996, a date that is a call to action for many human rights groups around the
country. Protesters began filing into Washington, D.C., today to prepare for the
11th Annual March Against Infant Circumcision, where demonstrators will voice
their opposition to male circumcision in front of the U.S. Capitol, The Supreme
Court, and the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists.
Male
genital mutilation, commonly referred to as circumcision, is the surgical
removal of the foreskin from the penis. Although medical research shows that the
foreskin is richly endowed with thousands of specialized nerve endings capable
of feeling sexual pleasure, and that a foreskin makes intercourse more
pleasurable for both the male and his partner, nonmedical circumcision still
persists in the United States. In 2004, it is estimated that up to 60% of
American boys will have their foreskins surgically removed for social,
“hygienic”, or religious reasons.
The full text of the bill proposals is
posted at www.mgmbill.org/pressrelease4.htm .
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Source : http://www.prweb.com/releases/2004/3/prweb115130.htm