This has nothing to with the health care debate. It's a hypothetical solution involving a form of eugenics and health care.It seems to me that the fitness of the human race is going to gradually drift (in a necessarily negative direction), since we can keep almost everyone alive. We will, of course, respond to this problem by creating better and better technology to keep even sicker people alive. And people will continue to become less and less fit on their own. Ultimately, this will lead to extremely expensive health care (worse than the present state of affairs) and very sick, frail humans.Obviously, straight up eugenics is horribly unethical: cue Godwin's Law. You can't go around sterilizing people against their will or throwing them in gas chambers. Other than the fact that it's a terribly unpleasant thing to do, the state shouldn't have the right to tell you whether or not you are fit enough to reproduce...So here's my idea. Take a hypothetical country: USoC, "United States of Canada." Citizens of USoC are provided with world class, universal health care, but with one stipulation: once they elect to receive this health care, they must voluntarily undergo sterilization. The voluntary sterilization part is not too important; alternatively, it could just be illegal for them to have children after that point (with a hefty fine) or to simply make any children they have non-citizens of USoC.So if you want to have children in USoC, you have to forgo any state sponsored health care (besides yearly check ups) until you're done having all your children. You have to make the decision yourself if you're fit enough. If you're fairly healthy, it's not a big deal. Once, you're old enough where you wouldn't want more children anyway, you can relax on some excellent care. If you know you're not going to make it to 20 without help, the state of course is willing to support you for life. And you don't create more suffering. This totally avoids the stigma eugenics has with not valuing human life. Potentially expensive at first, this would become vastly cheaper and cheaper over time. And people would end up healthier too.So how evil am I for thinking this?
12/5/2009 3:15:53 PM
Evil, or stupid?
12/5/2009 3:20:00 PM
100 years
12/5/2009 3:24:08 PM
^^Sure, please explain how I am stupid.^I was unaware. I was under the impression that forced sterilization was about 100 years old and I've never heard this specific idea suggested.[Edited on December 5, 2009 at 3:26 PM. Reason : asdfasdf]
12/5/2009 3:24:28 PM
Well it would help if you were clear about what problem you think will occur, and how preventing breeding of people on .gov care solves the problem.
12/5/2009 3:57:18 PM
All your plan seems to do is make sure there will be a smaller next generation, not a more fit next generation. Also, what is your definition of 'fit'? While it is true that normal natural forces no longer dictate individual survival, this just means it was replaced with cultural preferences, and it is unclear that human cultural preferences are prone to unfit outcomes. If I had to guess the future, it seems the difficulty with defining 'fitness' should encourage proliferation in the face of uncertainty. That's right, the more people we have right now the more fit the species will be in the face of future calamity. Name any possible future problem, and it would be better dealt with by a more populous planet than a less populous one.
12/5/2009 4:17:09 PM
smc was right. The problem I'm describing has been recognized for 150 years. I didn't think it needed explanation.Darwin ("Descent of Man"):
12/5/2009 5:10:19 PM
Ok, so the problem is we're eliminating natural selection with better medical care, increasing the number of unhealthy people alive. Fine, although you seem to ignore the number of health people who are kept alive or unhealthy people who are made healthy by these advancements as well.So how does stopping people from breeding if they go on .gov care solve this problem?
12/5/2009 5:20:38 PM
12/5/2009 5:22:25 PM
12/5/2009 5:36:38 PM
wow, you people hate welfare so much you're willing to institute forced sterilization to try to scare people from embracing it. good thing you were born who you were and not the son of a whore!veil of ignorance ftw.[Edited on December 5, 2009 at 5:44 PM. Reason : go read rawls]
12/5/2009 5:44:32 PM
12/5/2009 5:53:54 PM
^ Rly, presuming of course you are defining "very unhealthy" as "a debilitating or chronic condition that would prevent someone from living on their own without medical intervention and is diagnosed before the age of procreation."Of course if you're just defining very unhealthy as fat or genetically predisposed to Alzheimer's, well thats another story.
12/5/2009 6:07:53 PM
Any eugenics, "straight up" or not, is "horribly unethical." There's no ethical way to sterilize people that society deems undesirable. Luring people into consenting to it does not make it better.Someone who is "not going to make it to 20 without help"? So you wanna sterilize poor 18 year-olds who get injured in car accidents?
12/5/2009 7:39:57 PM
This is far more dumb that evil, because you’re trading physically fit and strong people, for potentially very intelligent people.Some of the smarter people I know in college would have been dead 100 years ago do to weird allergies, or congenital conditions. Humanity these days is being advanced FAR more by intellect than physical strength, and someone’s ability to learn has very little correlation with their ability to survive without healthcare.
12/5/2009 7:47:17 PM
Nah we still have places where only the fit survive and the weak die off.Just look at that bastion of humanity Africa. If only we could be more like them.
12/5/2009 8:08:20 PM
Somalia: The AynRandiest Country on the Planet
12/5/2009 11:21:55 PM
12/5/2009 11:58:41 PM
12/6/2009 9:43:58 AM
The more people you have, the more you will have working on the problem.
12/6/2009 9:45:17 AM
Another point:A lot of the stuff that evolution spends its time on is plain stupid and irrelevant for our society. If you're arguing that we should still be going through an evolutionary process, then what about skin color? The people at higher latitudes should be getting paler and those at lower latitudes should be getting darker. Where does international travel fit into this picture? It doesn't! The "problem" that evolution was trying to solve with skin color doesn't even really exist anymore. So skin cancer and vitamin D deficiency related medical issues should only really be considered to make someone ineligible for reproduction if their offspring are planning to live in a place that gets the same amount of sunlight.And what if I plan for my descendants to live in space colonies? I should be permitted genetic "disorders" so long as they stand a credible potential for it to be advantageous in a different environment that we may someday live in. Expect to hear a lot of those ridiculous arguments with the suggestion from the OP.[Edited on December 6, 2009 at 10:23 AM. Reason : ]
12/6/2009 10:22:50 AM
Say no to breeding fatties
12/6/2009 1:27:40 PM
in famine only the fatties survive
12/6/2009 1:34:03 PM
12/6/2009 3:12:52 PM
12/6/2009 3:46:37 PM
12/6/2009 3:58:16 PM
12/6/2009 4:03:52 PM
The 99.999993 % of our genome that we inherit from our parents plays a very large role in our health.If mutations never happened, then why would be be expecting any 'drift' in the health of humans?
12/6/2009 4:08:00 PM
^I dunno. Recombination maybe? Lots of shitty genetic disorders already exist. You don't need to bring mutations into the picture.
12/6/2009 4:12:38 PM
12/6/2009 4:25:38 PM