Kolya on 8/3/2012 at 09:26
Jesus....
Look, despite the provocatively misleading terms used here ("cocksucking") it's clear that there's nothing sexual about it. Have you never sucked blood from a wound to prevent infection? Wouldn't you do that for a child that cannot help itself? Say on a camping trip where no antiseptics are readily available?
Of course it's stupid to hang on to such primitive methods in the presence of medical antiseptics. (And inflicting that wound in the first place is even more stupid, but let's not get into that now.) Apparently this religious tradition of infection prevention has killed several babies, so that should be an obvious sign even for the most retarded to stop it.
However you are far too willing to go on a hateful rant whenever an issue like this is discussed. Some personal trauma, I take it. But try to keep your mind switched on. And remember not to attribute to evil what can be explained by plain stupidity.
Thirith on 8/3/2012 at 09:50
Kolya, I like you and all, but sometimes (?) you take things way too seriously. Dunno whether it's cross-cultural misunderstanding or your personality, but the thread title itself should tell you that some of this is tongue in cheek, as is much of the thread, and the rest barely qualifies as "hateful rants" either.
Independent Thief on 8/3/2012 at 12:07
I think Kolya has hit the nail on the head. As for that rabbinical practice-there's nothing in the Old Testament that tells them to do that at all.:p
Sulphur on 8/3/2012 at 12:18
Kolya's just rolling with the trolling as per usual. I'm gonna have to post a thread about chakats and anal fuckens to bring out the real deal. Bierwurst über alles!
Muzman on 8/3/2012 at 12:39
Anal fuckens?! What on earth...
Is that where someone sticks a chicken up their arse?
It is isn't it.
(dammit, now I've said it someone somewhere is going to do it. That's just how it works)
fett on 8/3/2012 at 14:59
These are the kinds of threads TTLG has been missing of late.
Orthodox Judaism is filled to the rim with crazy shit like this.
Al_B on 8/3/2012 at 15:32
rim or brim?
DDL on 8/3/2012 at 16:30
Brim in the old testament, Rim in the torah. There have been several long treatises written on it, didn't you know?
fett on 8/3/2012 at 17:11
Wouldn't it technically be "rim?" As in, "The rim of the cup." As opposed to brim, which I think addresses the volume inside the cup - as in, "The cup was brimming with coffee."
Supposably.
Al_B on 8/3/2012 at 17:34
Might just be a language difference. To be crude: "Rim" or "Rimming" has certain meanings that probably don't have the same connotations in the USA.