If it's frivolous then it shouldn't be in the parents' hands anyway.seremtan wrote:the debate about genetic engineering is pretty weird: it seems to revolve around finding the borderline between "justified" and "frivolous" uses, i.e. screening out a fatal condition might be "justified" while screening out short-sightedness or lack of melanin are "frivolous"
but why shouldn't parents be able to do these things? not sure about the dwarf couple wanting dwarf kids, but the objection that "the kid doesn't have a choice like he does with religion" doesn't stand up, because if genetic modification were impossible, they still wouldn't have a choice, on account of the fact that unborn (and un-conceived) kids don't have choices, period
I've heard about deaf parents wanting only deaf children, how fucking selfish and beyond sense is that? It's of no general benefit to the child beyond belonging to the section of society to which their parents belong, and surely they would belong (at least to an extent) anyway given that their parents do and given they would have a broad understanding of their parents' situation?
There must be more to it than that but it's only limiting the child by deliberately "giving" them a handicap.
In the situation that this type of treatment were available maybe restraint is the order of the day, with only life-threatening conditions being treated.