Rationalizing Eugenics
Over at The Corner, there is some back and forth going on about the James Watson Esquire interview that I posted earlier today. John Derbyshire sniffs that the worry about eugenics is overblown, so long as it isn't state imposed: "If you don't like eugenics, you are not going to like the 21st century. "Eugenics" became a scare-word because of ***STATE-SPONSORED*** eugenics programs, which were indeed a horrible idea—especially in the 1920s, when promoters of eugenics had very little idea what (as a matter of technical biology, I mean) they were talking about. State-organized anything is pretty dubious. We're conservatives; we know that.
"Private, commercial eugenics is here, though. It already has a foot in the door, & pretty soon it'll be sprawled on your living-room couch. My children (probably) and my grandchildren (certainly) will practice eugenics. Why would they not? The desire to have smart, healthy, good-looking offspring is wellnigh universal. If parents can get assurance of such an outcome for a few thousand bucks, why should they not purchase that assurance? In a free country, how will you stop them? And why would conservatives or libertarians want to stop them? "Eugenics" has become such a scare-word that we'll probably have to re-name the process to avoid all the shrieking and skirt-clutching; but it will be eugenics just the same."
Such thinking is profoundly shallow and facile, in my view. Eugenics wasn't bad because it was state sponsored. It was bad because it was poisonous at the core; presuming the right do declare some human beings to be inferior to other human beings based on inherent attributes and capacities. Once that premise is accepted, the oppression naturally follows. And renaming it, won't change its intrinsic wrongness.
Moreover, assuming for the sake of argument that the government would keep its paws out of the new eugenics enterprise--a very dubious proposition--the argument that "choice" would prevent oppression ignores a crucial truth about human culture: Peer pressure and social coercion often have far greater power to control our behavior than do government policies and the law. Many parents already intertwine their own egos with the successes or failures of their children. Considering the awful competitiveness exhibited by some soccer moms and dads, the phenomenon of the "stage mother," and the lengths to which some parents go to assure their children are enrolled in the best schools, imagine the competition that would develop to produce the "best" genetically enhanced babies. And the result, as we have discussed here before, is parents having children as so many manufactured commodities, literally designed to fulfill parental desires.


2 Comments:
Derbyshire has been hanging out with Steve Sailer and other genetic determinist/reductionist types for several years now, so his attitude doesn't surprise me in the least.
The idealization -
A parent finds out that her baby is going to have Down Syndrome. Medical advances being what they are, there is a way to alter the baby's genetics so that either the symptoms will be very mild or so that the child will be born without Downs. The mother considers the fact that babies born with Downs are more prone to infections and illnesses, and chooses to have the alteration done to improve her baby's chance of survival after birth. In this instance, the genetic modification is done after conception, for the benefit of the baby, to improve his or her survival chances.
The reality - People will make designer babies the next new fad. Folks will choose for skin color, hair color, eye color, create these "perfect" kids, choose for different talents, and then scream their heads off at their seven-year-olds when the kids refuse to go to soccer practice and instead want to stay home and finger-paint. Folks will whine about how they blew a whole bunch of money to make sure Junior would get a scholarship to Harvard only to find out that the school won't accept him because he still came in behind someone else. In this case the parents don't really give a damn about the kid's survival, they care about how the kid reflects on themselves.
Truth is, I'm good with treatments that will help babies be born able to live full, long, and healthy lives - we as adults owe it to the little guys to protect them and give them a good start. They didn't ask to be here, so we have to be responsible for them. But it's a sad fact that anything we come up with as a bene won't be used to save kids with troubled starts. They'll be used by selfish adults who think that the only people they're responsible for are themselves. These post-modernists who believe that they're the center of the universe, who are selfish and whiny and don't like not being comfortable.
Eugenics is bad under any name. It's not for the benefit of the baby. It's for the benefit of the adult, and that kind of selfishness isn't good.
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