<<Let me give you another example. If somehow we would get technology from 200 years in the future, the world could break into chaos because we wouldn?t be able to handle the power and the responsibility. But for the society in the future who has been using it for decades its part of day-to-day life.>>
I disagree with the latter half of your statement. I agree that if we could get technology from 200 years into the future, people might not know how to handle it. However, I do not agree that just because people have been using technology for decades that they will use it properly and responsibily. Genetic engineering is a completely new technology, something so different from everything else human science has been able to accomplish. The ability to change and control anything and everything about your child is a power that is beyond our capability to understand and use responsibly. No matter when genetic engineering becomes widespread, people are still going to have the same reaction to it. It's just like no matter when nuclear technology was introduced into the world, people would still try to build destructive weapons out of it. If we were just discovering nuclear technology today, don't you think that we would make the same choices that people did 50 years ago? I do. Our society has not changed that much. There would still be people would abuse the technology, just as there will still be people who will abuse the technology of genetic engineering, whether it comes into the public view 5 years or 50 years from now.
This isn?t about if you care for your children or not. If a new technology has been tested for years, is declared safe by the government, general public knows how it works and what it is capable of and it safes lifes, then you will see it differently.
I don't think you understand my point. Once genetic engineering becomes available, the public demand for it will be so great that there will not be enough time to test it, to declare it safe, and to educate everyone on how it works. People are just going to want to have it done to their children as quickly as possible. This kind of behavior will only lead to the chaos that I described in my previous post. Just as the advent of the technology may be unavoidable, so will the huge demand and widespread panic that it will create.
Genetic engineering may have the ability to save lives, but it also has the ability to ruin society as we know it. See my previous post for the kind of situation I'm referring to.
<<So if doctors would find a genetic defect of your baby (f.i. Progeria), would you just say, hey if god wants my kid to have this disease, then so be it cause he the almighty doesn?t want us to alter genes? That?s what I call careless and ignorant.>>
Okay, wait a second. I never said that we should just tacetly accept whatever happens to us, even if it is the Will of God. It's alright to be angry if something bad happens to you, or sad, or confused, or distraught. Similarly, it's alright to be elated if something good happens to you. I never said that we should just emotionlessly accept whatever happens simply because it is God's Will.
That being said, of course I would be unhappy if my child had a genetic defect. Any parent would, it's only natural. However, I do believe that we need to accept people for what they are, not what they could have been. I believe that, in time, I would come to realize that God had made my child in this way for a reason -- and not necessarily a negative one. Some people have said that children who are disabled or incapitated in some way can bring a lot of joy to a lot of different people. Just because someone has a genetic illness does not make them any less of a valuable person.
<<First of all scholarships are an exception, we are generalizing here. Those thousands of kids living in ghettos or really poor neighborhoods have little chance of escaping from that life.>>
Actually, scholarships are not an exception these days. There are many federally funded grant and loan programs that help a lot of families put their children through college. Most colleges have their own private endowments that help families afford the cost of college as well. If people would simply apply themselves to the task, they could get into a four-year college with little problem.
I will, however, agree that a full 4-year education at a well-known institution is not possible for everyone. But the fact that it is possible for most people through scholarships from many different sources is a great accomplishment. The percentage of children attending college is significantly higher than it was, say, 50 or 100 years ago.
The fact of the matter is that with genetic engineering and the situation I described, those people whose parents could not afford to genetically engineer them will fall into a trap that they would never be able to break free from. There would be no chance of scholarship money to go to school, since it would all go to the smart, athletic kids whose parents could afford the genetic alterations. These people would have no recourse, whereas people today do.
<<So what do want to do, just close your eyes and hope it will all go away. This might work in bible stories but the real world doesn?t function that way.>>
No, I do never said that I want to just close my eyes and hope this all disappears. I was advocating doing something to stop research on human genetic engineering. And I have never heard of a Bible story where people just closed their eyes and hoped everything went away, so you can stop with those kinds of comments right now.
<<So instead of saying ban it all we should think about ways to regulate this technology.
Every technology can be used to destruct, do you think that when scientists like Einstein when working on nuclear fission, thought about building a bomb for mass destruction, I don?t think so.
If this tech ever turns into reality life, as we know it will change fundamentally and you like everybody else will have to adapt.
Resistance and ignorance are futile.>>
I'm sorry, but there's not going to be any realistic way to regulate this technology. Once scientists have the ability to change any characteristic they want to, the demand will be so great that eventually the kind of situation I described will bring itself about. There is just no way we can regulate this so that it doesn't fall into the wrong hands. Even in the right hands, this kind of technology has the potential to be infinitely destructive.
People should not be tampering with the basic forces that make us who we are. It would be terrible mistake to start tampering with the gene pool. If we screw up, we will have destroyed hundreds of thousands of years of careful evolution for our own selfish desires.
Nick