Apt, on 11 May 2015 - 06:53 PM, said:
The truth is we already perform eugenics. People get tests and scans that reveal birth defects, diseases, genetic disorders, etc. In most cases like those abortions are performed and society as a whole is better for it. EDIT: Not to mention when we do invasive surgeries pre-natal. This isn't about the right to live, or the right to breed, it's about improving the quality of life both for child and parent. I think such procedures will only become more prevalent as the technology improves. And why not? Why not make designer babies as long as this is done across the civilization as whole. We'd have healthier, stronger, smarter children as a result.
The word "eugenics", it seems, can refer to a huge amount of different practices - anything that vaguely aligns with improving human health and is correlated with reproductive habits. Apparently just trying to discourage people from inbreeding is considered a form of "eugenics". The medical technology allowing us to do in-vitro fertilization, have sperm donors, abstinence-only education in Utah, tax credits for people with children, etc can all be considered a form of "eugenics".
So you're right, Apt, that even if the word itself causes many/most people to think of forced sterilization programs, there are many other forms of eugenics that are already having huge impacts on society without as much controversy.
Still, Alberta's eugenics program was indeed horrific and there are many other cases in other countries. As you say, medical ethics have changed a lot since then - now we are morally enlightened and can look back on those dark times, knowing we would never be so unethical. Except, people in the 60s didn't think it was unethical then, did they? So now we start a eugenics program that we think is vastly more ethical, and fifty years from now the victims of it will be looking back at us thinking they are so glad they are enlightened compared to our horrific morals...
Obviously, though, we do already consider some eugenics to be perfectly ethical and fine (or at least most people do) like egg/sperm donation, prenatal diagnoses, etc, while others are abhorrent to us. Where do we draw the line then?
I don't have an answer for that, though one aspect of it would be that most of the past programs we now consider terrible were government-mandated programs that forced eugenic choices on people, as opposed to merely having the medical option available and giving someone the choice of whether to use contraception, have an abortion, undergo pre-natal diagnosis procedures, etc.