Showing posts with label Eugenics. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Eugenics. Show all posts

Monday, October 15, 2012

Philosophical Ju-Jitsu: You're The Eugenicist, I'm Not


Ho-hum. Pro-death philosopher Julian Savulescu thinks getting rid of the genetically different is eugenics, but not what he proposes for designer babies. For this illogic you need to be a philosopher???
I’m not the Nazi; you’re the Nazi
Julian Savulescu, the utilitarian bioethicist at Oxford University, has the perfect riposte when his opponents tell him that his proposals for genetic selection remind them of Nazi eugenics. more

Pro-deathers Still Praising Eugenicists


No surprise here – pro-deathers getting accolades, that is. These kudos are for an old-school Canadian eugenicist. Don’t worry – we have many eugenicists in this day and age to replace her.
Canada honours prominent eugenicist
In bioethics, as in every field, reputations are kept aloft more by the volume of the applause than by the historical record, at least for a while. This seems to be the lesson from yet another honour burnishing the reputation of one of Canada’s most famous women, Dr Helen MacMurchy.
Dr MacMurchy (1862-1953) was named one of the 10 leading female physicians in the Western world in 1949 for her contributions to public health. And now the Canadian government has just designated her as “a person of national historic significance”.
However, as Don Butler reminded readers of the Ottawa Citizen, she was also “the most prominent promoter of eugenics in Canada” and was ultimately responsible for sterilising thousands of “feeble-minded women”, a policy which has left a legacy of grief and shame. more

Friday, April 6, 2012

Can Eugenics Become A Right?


This is a very important case coming before the European Court because there is the potential that aborting unborn children because of their disability could become a human right.
European Court Set for Landmark Abortion and Eugenics Cases
The European Court of Human Rights (ECHR) is facing several pivotal cases in the coming months relating to abortion that pro-life advocates hope will help to preserve human life and dignity in Europe, as the court's decisions will be binding to all 47 member states.
The European Center for Law and Justice (ECLJ), which presides as a third party over such decisions, is drawing attention to a number of different cases that will serve to establish abortion policies across Europe, LifeNews.com reported on a statement the ECLJ made. Abortion is widely legal across Europe, with limited restrictions. more

Thursday, February 2, 2012

US & Eugenics - It's Happening All Over Again


Here’s an excellent, accessible account of eugenic history in America. Read it and you’ll see that we are doing eugenics in American today – again.
Eugenics, euthanasia and American race improvement
“Passive eugenicide allowed babies deemed “defective” to starve, or be denied medical attention.”
The “Unfit” defined: Eugenics as an instrument of race improvement was inspired by animal husbandry that improved livestock through selective breeding, and culling undesirables from breeding stock. Eugenics sought to apply the principle to human breeding.
Eugenics “ideal” for America’s racial stock was the Nordic blue-eyed, blond-haired Aryan. The “unfit” included the “feeble minded,” homosexuals; persons evidencing criminal traits, alcoholism, blindness, deafness, schizophrenia, bi-polar disorder and a wide range of “mental illnesses.” To eugenicists even “laziness” was understood as a genetic trait to be eliminated from the race. more

Monday, January 16, 2012

The New Eugenic Nation


It’s here, and has been for some while – our New Eugenic Nation.

And it’s becoming more and more visible to the point that only now are parents getting to see it up close, ugly, and very personal – that their child’s disability is used as a tool of discrimination to deny them treatment. Predictably, parents and lay people are astounded.

They shouldn’t be. This has been going on for years and as we become less sensitized to issues of death and dying, and as the pro-death movement keeps up a constant drumbeat that dying is better than living, people with disabilities will see their treatments increasingly going to other people.

The new scarlet letter is “D” for disability, and those bearing it are judged as less worthy of treatment and life than the rest of us.

On Sunday I posted the heartbreaking story of a parent whose child has been refused a kidney transplant because she is “retarded.” (here).

Yes, the cold assessment of the medical team was that a transplant for the child was not worth it because she was retarded and would not benefit as much as someone, apparently, who was not retarded.

This is, unfortunately, the current state of affairs. How did we get here?

Well, many people, even those who think the culture of death has it wrong, disagree with me that we are in an age of new eugenics. For many, it comes too close to what the Nazis espoused and is therefore, for some reason, off limits.

Unfortunately, they are wrong.

Eugenics is back.

The idea of eugenics is not hard to understand. It is based on the notion of the pursuit of perfection (or as close as humanity can come to perfection). Eugenics says that humans, like all animals, reproduce to keep the species not only alive, but in good shape. What this means is “survival of the fittest,” which is achieved by the law of the jungle: the stronger (more perfect) will live to reproduce and the sickly and disabled (less perfect) will be abandoned or destroyed. Over generations, this will mean that the species grows stronger and more perfect and therefore have better chances of survival.

This is exactly what, in the 1920s, the eugenicists in the US, the UK, and Germany fervently believed. Of course, they not only believed it, they put their fatal ideas into practice. In the US and Britain, hundreds of thousands of people considered “inferior” (including the retarded, the blind, the deaf, those who did not conform to society) were sterilized or institutionalized to prevent them from “breeding.” It was the next step from natural selection: deliberate dividing of populations into those who were worth something - usually their ability to contribute to society in some meaningful way - and those who were of less worth – those who couldn’t contribute and who were a drag on society.

The Nazis took eugenics to a very active form by killing their own citizens with disabilities as a means of preventing weakness.

And that’s exactly what we, here in the US, are doing today.

And it’s being pushed by the medical profession, those who previously had pledged to “do no harm,” now morphed into “do no harm to those who are more perfect, never mind doing harm to those judged less perfect.”

How so?

Well, when medical decisions have to be made about the care or treatment of the disabled, that judgment often goes against their best interests. In the piece I referred to above, the doctor made the mistake of actually saying what he meant: That the child was not worth the transplant. The subtext here, of course, is that there is another more perfect child who would benefit more.

Plain and simple: In the US today, having a disability makes you a second class citizen likely to get less consideration because you won’t ever be what the nondisabled population will be.

Now, the child in the piece will not likely be deliberately killed by doctors as the Nazis did, but in refusing her the transplant, they will be killing her nevertheless.

Sunday, January 15, 2012

The Ugly Face Of The New Eugenics

Read every word of this story and tell me this isn’t eugenics live and well. Sad, disgusting, and exactly what will happened to tens of thousands of people with disabilities as “parsimonious medicine” – read rationing, becomes more and more a reality.
Brick Walls
I am going to try and tell you what happened to us on January 10, 2012, in the conference room in the Nephrology department at Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia.
We arrived for our regular Nephrology visit with Amelia’s doctor who has seen her for the last three years. She examines Amelia and sends us for labs. I ask about the transplant and she says we have about six months to a year until she needs one. She tells us she reserved the conference room and when we get back from labs, we can meet with the transplant team and he can tell us about the transplant process.
. . . He says about three more sentences when something sparks in my brain. First it is hazy, foggy, like I am swimming under water. I actually shake my head a little to clear it. And then my brain focuses on what he just said.
I put my hand up. “Stop talking for a minute. Did you just say that Amelia shouldn’t have the transplant done because she is mentally retarded. I am confused. Did you really just say that?” more

Wednesday, January 11, 2012

Genetic Testing: Friend Of The New Eugenics


Here’s a comprehensive piece that argues that, yes, the new eugenics is firmly established in the 21st century.
Unnatural selection: Is evolving reproductive technology ushering in a new age of eugenics?
In-vitro fertilization and genetic testing are increasingly used, including in Canada, by couples capable of conceiving naturally, to screen out not just catastrophic diseases but other 'undesirable' conditions. Will the future see a genetic elite rise above the messy, natural masses, and is that so bad?
Humanity has long dreamed of perfection, striving to be faster, stronger and brighter, pushing nature to the limit. Four centuries before people were conceived in a petri dish, Swiss alchemist Paracelsus claimed flawless little beings could be grown in pumpkins filled with urine and horse dung, but there is no record he produced a crop.
With the birth of Louise Brown in 1978, the test tube finally succeeded where the pumpkin had failed, and the year she turned 11, scientists moved beyond making life in a lab: They found a way to peer into an embryo's genes and predict what that life might be like. more
 
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