Tuesday, May 19, 2009

eugenics is fine, as long as...

One more from Joseph Bottum in First Things...

Back in February, Dr. Jeff Steinberg, director of Fertility Institutes in Los Angeles, announced that he would help couples choose the eye, hair, and skin color of their children using genetic embryo screening. “Genetic health is the wave of the future,” he told the New York Daily News. “So if they’ve got major problems with it, they need to sit down and really examine their own consciences, because there’s nothing that’s going to stop it.”

As it happens, enough people did sit down, examine their consciences, and then stood right back up again: The public outcry eventually forced Steinberg’s clinic to suspend the service. In its news release, the Fertility Institutes admitted that, “though well intended, we remain sensitive to public perception and feel that any benefit the diagnostic studies may offer are far outweighed by the apparent negative societal impacts involved.”

The clinic hasn’t exactly stopped practicing eugenics. They still boast of a “100 percent sex-selection success rate”—meaning, of course, that embryos of the undesired sex are discarded. The clinic also screens embryos for “albinism or other ocular pigmentation disorders” as well as a range of genetic abnormalities such as Down syndrome and hemophilia.

Eugenics is fine, as long as you don’t alter eye and hair color.

If you're interested, I have an essay on the history of eugenics in Indiana...

2 Comments:

At May 19, 2009 at 11:11 PM , Blogger Janet P said...

Excellent essay, Eric!

I've always thought of "Eugenics" as "People Playing God".
Never considered that birth-control (in the contraceptive sense) qualified as eugenics - don't quite get that.

We have several children and my husband and I never opted for any prenatal testing (Down's Syndrome, etc). Life is not all that long. I thought we would learn to be happy with whatever precious little human God gave us.

[Hopefully no typos on this post!!??
There were some mistakes on my last one - I get tired late at night!!]

 
At May 20, 2009 at 7:12 AM , Blogger Cheryl said...

Your essay discussion of Dr. Mohler's comments on a (yet to be discovered) genetic link to homosexuality, brings to mind the Nature/Nurture "debate".

 

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