Absolutely, 100% against genetic manipulation - especially done by humans.
Wow.....
So, you'ld rather have a child get a cancer at age 5, then to allow for a genetic treatment that would produce a healthy child instead?
That's....... I want to say "immoral".
I would never trust another human to alter my genetics. The idea is asinine to me; there is already enough academic dishonesty, immorality and lack of ethics for procedures that have nothing to do with something as serious as genetic manipulation, or transhumanism.
Do you also use the same reasoning when it comes to non-genetic medical sciences?
How about having your eyes lasered to prevent going blind?
Even if it was my daughter/son, I wouldn't let someone else alter their genetics - with the hope that my child will be fine now, or later. I put my faith in other things.
I'ld call that serious child abuse and neglect.
A befriended couple of ours are both carriers of a certain gene. It is known that if both parents have that gene, it has a 70% chance of causing
serious problems in the child. Most likely, it will not survive pregnancy (and seriously put the health of the mother at risk in the process). And if it somehow manages to survive till brith, chances are even bigger that the child will have to deal with all kinds of complications which would result in having it spend most of its first years in a hospital with uncountable amounts of surgery which it will likely again not survive. The chances of it all turning out okay are close to nihil.
However, by rather routine genetic manipulation, all that can be avoided and it could be ensured that it is a normal pregnancy, with the normal average risk factors that everyone has to deal with.
But you would prefer to run the risk of 7 out 10 of extreme problems, death, suffering, etc?
yeah, I don't get that.
But, I would also never voluntarily have children and bring them into this world
That's fine for you, but it makes it actually even worse.... because now you aren't even talking about YOUR OWN children, but about the children of other people.
Also, just because I can't help myself,... I have a son that's almost 2 years old. While I didn't really have a "child wish" before that lovely boy, I can honestly tell you that it is the best thing I have ever accomplished in my entire life.
To each his own off course. But if my experience can be generalized in any way, I can tell you that your entire idea of "children" takes a 180° turn the second your baby boy grabs your finger and throws you a smile. Best moment ever. I cried like a child.
I am sure appeals to emotions as a parent will make plenty of people do things they know are ridiculous (in my opinion,) which is why I will never willingly put myself in that situation in the first place (procreation.)
I don't consider it an appeal to emotion, but rather an appeal to reason and compassion.
In fact, in a lot of such situations, the "reasonable thing" oftenly is the very opposite of what emotion / beliefs would suggest.
For example... The other day I read an article about some woman who got a child of which the doctor adviced to abort it because of all the complications, but the woman wouldn't have it and she persisted and had the child.
The author of the article wrote it as if that woman was some kind of hero and the ultimate form of "self sacrifice" etc.
I felt the exact opposite was true. She was anything but a hero and if anything, it was the ultimate form of egoism. Because she put her OWN desperate wish to be a mother above the well-being of her unborn child. Her decision wasn't geared towards what was best for the child... it was geared towards her
own desires and wishes.
The child now faces a lifetime of suffering, disability and being incapable of living independently. He'll spend most of his days in a hospital bed and will have to deal with surgery upon surgery upon surgery.
I'm going off-topic, I realise....
But just to illustrate that we have likely VERY different ideas concerning the morals and ethics of medical practices.