▲ | iLoveOncall 2 days ago | |||||||
I don't see how it is ethical AT ALL to let new children have Down syndrome when we have the ability to eliminate the gene. If Nazis hadn't practiced eugenics it wouldn't have been shuned as it is today. There's nothing wrong with eugenics in itself, just with how it's applied. | ||||||||
▲ | user____name 2 days ago | parent | next [-] | |||||||
The social effects at scale are what bothers me. Just wait a century until employers put "no genetic defects" in their job applications. Or parents who decide to have old fashioned non-designer babies have trouble getting their kids insured. Or homophobia will become normalized again because "they should have fixed it in the womb". Is this a sufficient reason to not prevent genetic defects? Who can say. | ||||||||
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▲ | HPsquared 2 days ago | parent | prev | next [-] | |||||||
It's one thing for the parents to decide, quite another for a bunch of politicians to decide who gets to be born. | ||||||||
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▲ | pfortuny 2 days ago | parent | prev [-] | |||||||
So there is a moral imperative to abort fetuses with Down's syndrome? Wow, that is certainly difficult to explain. Now abortion has become a moral imperative in some cases... | ||||||||
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