RacoonQueen wrote: Holy Jesus I think this must be the stupidest post I've ever seen on boards and that really does take some doing.
the beer revolu wrote: » No they aren't. Everyone is laughing at you, the OP, and One Eyed Jack. Real life out loud laughing.
Lefty Bicek wrote: » Less of the demonising of women who choose not to breastfeed, please. Shame on you.
FunLover18 wrote: » I'm not denying evolution, I've admitted it's a function of breasts however it is very much an additional function as it only exists in humans whereas mammary glands produce milk across all mammals because it's their primary function. Mammals evolved with mammary glands to produce and store milk for their young. The fact that in humans they've evolved to also be a sexual attraction is very much an add-on. You'd hardly argue the ability to make puppy eyes is of equal importance to a dog as sight. It's an additional function that evolved long after they evolved eyes in the first place.
paleoperson wrote: I would argue that anyone who thinks breasts are not sexual or "no more sexual than any other body part" is not a fully functioning member of society.
One eyed Jack wrote: » I don’t know, “monkey see, monkey do” is a fairly valid assumption that applies in human and animal behaviour, only humans had the capacity throughout history to develop alternative means of nourishing their infants so we didn’t have to breastfeed.
One eyed Jack wrote: » This stuff about assuming primary and secondary functions in evolution is denying evolution, or at least not understanding what evolution actually means.
bee06 wrote: » If you put a newborn baby on it’s mother’s chest it will crawl to the nipple to latch on. It’s the baby’s instinct. It’s not watching all the other babies going “hmm, that looks good, I’ll have me some of that”.
Katelyn Putrid Tackle wrote: » It's like riding a bike really isn't it, breastfeeding. Tricky to get the hang of but once you've learned it you just never lose the knack of sucking a boob. Jack, seriously. Are you ok?
ZilkyG wrote: » Genuine question. This seems to be all the rage now, and the argument for it, is that it's completely natural! Well so is ****ting, yet society dictates that we must withdraw to the shadows for something so 'natural'.
volchitsa wrote: » Newborns don't copy anyone, they have a rooting instinct where they search for the milk. Just like all mammals. This is not difficult stuff.
OMM 0000 wrote: I used to have a pet crow, a lovely little fella who loved a sing song and would eat anything. One day we were on Grafton Street and he was dying for a snack, so I started **** into his mouth. I got arrested and did three years in Mountjoy. It's really a disgrace - if women can breast feed their kids in public, why can't I **** into a crow's mouth? Makes no sense.
A Tyrant Named Miltiades! wrote: I grew up on a farm, yet I never cease to be amazed by how calves and foals instinctively seek-out the dark part of the dam's groin (they never start by nuzzling the forelegs) for their food. I know it's a biological reflex, but how?
eviltwin wrote: » Who is demonising women who use formula?
'the WHO (World Health Organisation) guidelines on breastfeeding. These are based on best evidence... '
There are many situations in which expressing breastmilk is useful and important to enable a mother to initiate or continue breastfeeding. Expressing milk is useful to: - relieve engorgement; - relieve blocked duct or milk stasis; - feed a baby while he learns to suckle from an inverted nipple; - feed a baby who has difficulty in coordinating suckling; - feed a baby who `refuses', while he learns to enjoy breastfeeding; - feed a low-birth-weight baby who cannot breastfeed; - feed a sick baby, who cannot suckle enough; - keep up the supply of breastmilk when a mother or baby is ill; - leave breastmilk for a baby when his mother goes out or to work; - prevent leaking when a mother is away from her baby. - help a baby to attach to a full breast; - express breastmilk directly into a baby's mouth; - prevent the nipple and areola from becoming dry and sore.
Lefty Bicek wrote: Apart from all that, my original point was that breastfeeding in public is done more often that is strictly necessary.
Plumbthedepths wrote: » You're confusing public masturbation with feeding a child. Did your solicitor not explain the difference?
Lefty Bicek wrote: » Apart from all that, my original point was that breastfeeding in public is done more often that is strictly necessary. So, really, there's nothing whatsoever wrong with expressing milk. Nothing. It might even seem to be sensible to have a bottle handy in the baby bag when you're out and about. But who would notice that ?
Lefty Bicek wrote: » Obviously, the other poster is. Duh. If a person says, as the other poster did, that ... then anything else other than breastfeeding, is by definition, not best practice. For an alternative perspective on that type of judgementalism...https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2017/mar/28/an-unrealistic-pressure-mothers-on-what-its-like-to-breastfeed Apart from all that, my original point was that breastfeeding in public is done more often that is strictly necessary. Since people think they're smart enough to throw the WHO around, have some of this...https://www.who.int/nutrition/publications/infantfeeding/bf_counselling_participants_manual3.pdf So, really, there's nothing whatsoever wrong with expressing milk. Nothing. It might even seem to be sensible to have a bottle handy in the baby bag when you're out and about. But who would notice that ?
volchitsa wrote: » So, buy a breast feeding pump and bottles, oh and a sterilising system for bottles. Then pump enough milk into a series of bottles or freezer bags put them in a freezer, and when you're going out don't forget to have everything ready so that by the time the baby is hungry you have both enough to satisfy him/her but not so much that you end up having to throw out your preciously collected breast milk. Not difficult at all of course - and why should someone be expected to do that if they don't want to, just because some people are unable to separate their sexuality from seeing random women in the street. Do you feel women on the beach shouldn't be in bikinis any more than strictly necessary, and who decides what is necessary anyway? (There are lots of reasons for having a supply of breast milk handy - but having a bottle ready so you don't offend other people's sensibilities by feeding in public really doesn't seem to me to be one of them.)
micar wrote: » I'm single......two of sisters have children I've seen more of their boobs than any other womans in the last few years due to their breastfeeding. FML
Princess Consuela Bananahammock wrote: Just look away.
Plumbthedepths wrote: » Yet a poster here claims nature has no intent and all this behaviour is learned. Who teaches the new born animals?
One eyed Jack wrote: » Nature has no intent, because it doesn’t have a consciousness. Essentially, shìt just happens. Some shìt works to our advantage sometimes, and some shìt leaves us at a disadvantage in terms of how we have evolved, in the broader context of evolution as a whole. Women’s mammary glands would still produce milk for infants, but that doesn’t explain why their breasts are permanently enlarged after puberty (and that’s not even accounting for women who are “flat chested” who can still breastfeed). You might think you’re being smart with your who teaches the new born animals question, but in coming up with that question you’d be failing to acknowledge that while humans themselves are also animals, we differ from animals in that we aren’t as prone to acting on our primitive instincts. That’s why humans regard themselves as the apex of evolution, and animals are “less than” us. It’s why we say when we see people behaving in what we consider to be an inappropriate behaviour for civilised society, that they’re “acting like animals”.
One eyed Jack wrote: Nature has no intent, because it doesn’t have a consciousness. Essentially, shìt just happens. Some shìt works to our advantage sometimes, and some shìt leaves us at a disadvantage in terms of how we have evolved, in the broader context of evolution as a whole. Women’s mammary glands would still produce milk for infants, but that doesn’t explain why their breasts are permanently enlarged after puberty (and that’s not even accounting for women who are “flat chested†who can still breastfeed).
One eyed Jack wrote: You might think you’re being smart with your who teaches the new born animals question, but in coming up with that question you’d be failing to acknowledge that while humans themselves are also animals, we differ from animals in that we aren’t as prone to acting on our primitive instincts. That’s why humans regard themselves as the apex of evolution, and animals are “less than†us. It’s why we say when we see people behaving in what we consider to be an inappropriate behaviour for civilised society, that they’re “acting like animalsâ€.
One eyed Jack wrote: » Nature has no intent, because it doesn’t have a consciousness. Essentially, shìt just happens. Some shìt works to our advantage sometimes, and some shìt leaves us at a disadvantage in terms of how we have evolved, in the broader context of evolution as a whole. Women’s mammary glands would still produce milk for infants, but that doesn’t explain why their breasts are permanently enlarged after puberty (and that’s not even accounting for women who are “flat chested” who can still breastfeed).
One eyed Jack wrote: » You might think you’re being smart with your who teaches the new born animals question, but in coming up with that question you’d be failing to acknowledge that while humans themselves are also animals, we differ from animals in that we aren’t as prone to acting on our primitive instincts. That’s why humans regard themselves as the apex of evolution, and animals are “less than” us. It’s why we say when we see people behaving in what we consider to be an inappropriate behaviour for civilised society, that they’re “acting like animals”.