Thursday, March 05, 2009

Refusing to Prevent IVF Moral Anarchy


In his recent book, Imagining the Future, Yuval Levin succinctly identified the source of so many of our cultural problems today. It was a real "Bingo!" moment for me: Society has ceased to be primarily about promoting virtue. Rather, our primary drive as a culture today is to prevent all suffering. In that Quixotic quest, we have created an anything goes society driven by individual desire and yearning that tosses the principle of the common good to the wind.

IVF is a vivid case in point: In the wake of the birth of octuplets via IVF to Nadya Suleman--who had been implanted with six embryos, and due to twinning gave birth to eight babies--legislators in two states are finally seeking to rein in IVF with reasonable regulations based on already published professional ethical guidelines. And I am sure you will be shocked to learn that the efforts have hit the unlimited reproductive freedom wall. From the story:

Lawmakers in two states, outraged by the California mother of octuplets, are seeking to limit the number of embryos that may be implanted by fertility clinics.

The legislation in Missouri and Georgia is intended to spare taxpayers from footing the bill for women having more children than they can afford. But critics say the measures also would make having even one child more difficult for women who desperately want to become mothers. "What they are proposing is a cookie-cutter, one-size-fits-all approach," said Dr. Andrew Toledo, medical director of Reproductive Biology Associates in Atlanta. "Not every couple and not every patient is the same."

Infertility doctors argue that decisions on how many embryos to transfer should be left up to medical experts familiar with a patient's individual circumstances.

Then shut up about Suleman and the doctor who implanted her. Just because you would have made a different choice doesn't give you the right to moralize.

Decades ago Leon Kass warned that IVF, originally created to help infertile married couples have children, would lead to an anything goes mentality. He was mocked, but he was right. We were told then, as we are being told now, that we didn't have to regulate the field because we should trust patients and doctors to make responsible choices.

The difference is that now we know we can't: Unregulated IVF led to overproduction, resulting in hundreds of thousands of frozen embryos. This led to our looking at nascent human beings as objects rather than subjects, natural resources ripe for exploitation in scientific and medical research.

Unregulated IV--ironically along with unlimited abortion--also contributed to the idea that there is an unlimited fundamental right to have a genetically related child--as perhaps millions of children can't find adoptive homes. This, in turn, led to ever more extreme methods to exercise that right--surrogate motherhood, paying eugenically correct young women to risk their lives and health to provide eggs for wealthy couples who want only the most intelligent and beautiful offspring, post menopausal motherhood, using poor women as if they were brood mares, discriminatory sex selection, the eugenic practice of testing and discarding embryos that don't fit our health or cosmetic desires, not to mention contributing to advocacy for human cloning, genetic engineering, and transhumanist utopianism.

This might not have happened had we controlled the technology instead of letting it control us. But now it is probably too late: We have become a society in which even the most reasonable efforts to promote the general welfare almost always lose to Oprah-style hyper emotionalism that focuses on the pain such restrictions might have on individuals rather than on the bigger picture. But the understandable tears of people desperate to have children have been used as the lubricant to produce a reproductive moral anarchy that now includes in that expectation, the right to not only have a child but the child we want, and it is driving us to a new eugenics in which 90% of Down children are aborted and people are throwing away embryos because they might get adult onset cancer or won't have the desired hair or eye color.

This is not to say that we shouldn't care about people's unhappiness and anguish. Of course we should. But their tears have driven us into terminal nonjudgmentalism that prevents us from hitting the brakes to keep from driving off a moral cliff.

The same phenomenon drives other issues of concern to SHS, as well. We are all Wile E. Coyote about to hit the desert floor.

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8 Comments:

At March 06, 2009 , Anonymous Anonymous said...

This reminds me a bit of the movie "Gattaca". When I first saw it, I thought...this cannot happen.

Now I am not so sure. Will naturally conceived babies that are not disease free, and do not have all the right attributes become the exception instead of the norm in the future?

But hey, let's continue with the "anything goes" mentality where my rights are above anyone else's and where there seems to be no limits to what we want.

I always thought that nature will find its way to achieve balance again, no matter the price.

 
At March 06, 2009 , Blogger Wesley J. Smith said...

clauz: The most dangerous thought these days is, "It can't happen here." It is happening here. These days, if you can imagine it, someone will seriously propose it.

Thanks for stopping by SHS!

 
At March 06, 2009 , Blogger T E Fine said...

Wesley -

I was doing a little casual research on World War II and its aftermath, most notably about the experiments that went on in Japanese labratories during the war -

-I pause here to state that I am relaying facts about something that happened, so anybody who's going to accuse me of being racist, can it -

- wherein the Japanese performed vivisections on living patients without the benefit of anesthetic, ranging from captured enemy soldiers to Chinese infants. Sometimes the victims had limbs removed and then re-attached to the opposit side of the body. Expermients with hypothermia were done to determin how long a body could survive in sub-zero tempertures.

The US granted amnesty to the doctors who performed these experiments under the condition that they turn over their findings to the US government.

We let these people go, provided they gave us all their research that they aquired by killing other human beings.

After I re-read all this in its gory detail from the beginning for the fourth time, I realized that this country that I love is so utterly depraved, it's no wonder "the scientists" as you call them, are pushing for a morality-free lifestyle. The sick sons of goats that are in our government and in our research labratories sold out to the evils of the Japanese research labs out of greed for "knowledge." That knowledge is being implemented in our warfare departments to this day.

I wouldn't doubt that IVF was a ploy by "the scientists" specifically to get us to the point where they'd have embryos to experiment on. We were supposed to have been bigger than this. Our "greatest generation" seems to have lacked something even then.

 
At March 06, 2009 , Blogger Unknown said...

T.E.: Well at least there's two of us.

On Octomom, ok, I'm beginning to get it about why people are upset about it. I still respect her for wanting to give life, though, and I still think she has some sort of hormonal situation that's responsible for the whole thing. Unless there's something nefarious going on that we don't know about, at least not yet.

 
At March 07, 2009 , Blogger T E Fine said...

Ianthe -

We have the potential for so much good in the world, but we keep doing screwed up things! What the hell?!

As to the mother of the eight babies:

I could even grudgingly accept octomom if she weren't going on welfare, which she is according to the released government records. Erk. But seriously, there are *so* many factors involved that it's hard to justify the whole thing.

The thing that bugs me is that people say, "We shouldn't limit the number of implanted embryos because the more implanted, the better the odds of one of them 'taking,' and if too many end up 'taking,' ***the mom can always selectively reduce the number she's carrying, if she's sane.***"

It's that last line that bugs me. People are offended that this mother had eight babies and didn't reduce the number of them through abortion. Personally, I'm happy she carried them to term, but when the situation cropped up, she should have made some kind of arrangements for the kids - too many for her to care for will wear her out and will cause problems for the kids later in life. And I know several willing adoptive parents who would adore taking care of kids like hers. Grr.

 
At March 07, 2009 , Blogger Unknown said...

T.E.: It doesn't bother me as much that she's going on welfare as that we have a system in which that's possible in the first place; not that there shouldn't be a safety net for people in dire straits, but that things have gotten as lax and skewed as they have. Of course the kids should be provided for; none of this is their fault. We can't have the government, or anybody, saying to people you have too many children, either; that's what they've got in China. She doesn't want to give them up both because their hers and because she seems to have a hoarding thing going on. This whole situation wouldn't be possible if there weren't i.v.f. in the first place. What's scary is that it's now acceptable and "normal" to have kids by any means one chooses. As soon as life can be created artificially, it is no longer regarded with the same reverence as it was before. Both in humans and in non-human animals. It's done with non-human animals to produce food, racehorses, show dogs, etc. -- and then, as is the rationale for experimentation on other animals, "what works for them may work for us" -- and we end up treating incipient members of our own species with no more regard than we treat other animals which we shouldn't have treated that way in the first place for humane and ethical reasons and for our own sake.

 
At March 09, 2009 , Blogger Unknown said...

I.v.f. IS moral anarchy! Open that door and of course Octomom waddles in -- and she's a benign example in comparison to what i.v.f. IS. These are things that were never to be messed with in the first place and of course we've got the death culture when we have had the arrogance to "create" life. Take the mystique out of conception, lose respect for life and for the mystique of the individual and for individual sovereignty and thhe proper mystique of death -- the whole nine yards. We are NOT entitled to the "advances," SHS.

 
At March 10, 2009 , Blogger T E Fine said...

Ianthe -

You have said it both succenctly and eloquenly. IVF is wrong. Period.

 

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