tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-10381465.post5871478475557611597..comments2007-05-12T09:19:11.104-07:00Comments on Secondhand Smoke: Your 24/7 Seminar on Bioethics and the Importance of Being Human: Future Squinter? No Right to be BornWesley J. Smithhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/00087063614354714652wjs@wesleyjsmith.comBlogger4125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-10381465.post-49552103601240441662007-05-12T09:19:00.000-07:002007-05-12T09:19:00.000-07:00(((Shriek!)))I don't even think breeding puppies f...(((Shriek!)))<BR/><BR/>I don't even think breeding puppies for looks is right, and now THIS???<BR/><BR/>This is what happens when I go away for a few weeks and lose track of what's going on - everything falls to pieces and I don't know about it until later!<BR/><BR/>Grrrrrrr....<BR/><BR/>I can almost (ALMOST!) sympathize with people who are disabled who want to screen so they can have disabled children - not that I think it's right, but given the insane way people treat their babies as objects, I can understand blasting to the world at large, "Hey, see this totally imperfect and not-pretty lookin' kid? I had him willingly, I *selected* his looks, and I adore him as is, case closed, so put that in your pipe and smoke it!"<BR/><BR/>Not that selecting for disabilities is any better - it still treats babies like objects. Fug. But at least I get why people would think that way in the onset.T E Finehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/02145212330537906750noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-10381465.post-32746198341824184902007-05-08T19:19:00.000-07:002007-05-08T19:19:00.000-07:00Apologies if I've said this before: I have a minor...Apologies if I've said this before: I have a minor genetic anomaly known as Chotzen syndrome. Feel free to look it up. It's no biggie. It has some cosmetic effects and some functional ones, the latter being chiefly a propensity to deafness (though I am not deaf) and vision problems. Phenotypical manifestations vary widely, and some children require skull surgery to separate early-fused skull sutures to allow room for brain growth. But often that is not the case, as it was not for me or my children. The gene is dominant, and each child of a person with the anomaly has a 50% chance of having it. Funny facial looks are one of the chief symptoms, resulting from asymmetries in skull suture fusion. Sometimes one eye is notably lower than the other.<BR/><BR/>I am adopted and grew up not knowing why my face looked somewhat funny and why I was so short (another manifestation). It never even crossed my mind that there might be some specific "syndrome" that this manifested. My health was excellent, and I married and already had one beautiful child before finding my birth mother and being told about Chotzen syndrome. At that point I took a closer look at my lovely 4-year-old and said, "By golly, she has really high webbing between these fingers. I guess she did get the gene but it's hardly manifested at all in her." I think this is almost certainly correct. So I did a little research, realized it's no biggie, shrugged my shoulders and got on with life, including two more lovely children. The tops of their heads have funny shapes, and the third one has a low eye, like I do. They are all intelligent and happy. None required skull surgery. Nothin' to it.<BR/><BR/>But when I was first researching it, I had a conversation with a facial surgeon about what he'd seen clinically with it. After saying that people with it usually have a "very high quality of life," he _then_ came out with the suggestion that I could, if I wished, conceive in vitro and have embryos screened. It blew my mind. Here was this fellow essentially saying that I should try to make sure that someone like me or like my daughter would be bio-incinerated rather than born. Just "if I wanted to."<BR/><BR/>Designer babies, indeed.Lydia McGrewhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/00423567323116960820noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-10381465.post-9198093621381800112007-05-08T16:59:00.000-07:002007-05-08T16:59:00.000-07:00Well, only being able to look down or sideways is ...Well, only being able to look down or sideways is hardly cosmetic. In fact, it sounds somewhat disabling. That being said, if I had a genetic trait that I felt I could not pass along to my offspring, I would not have any. I would adopt instead.Laura(southernxyl)http://www.blogger.com/profile/02880277733341078157noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-10381465.post-47608494642842355642007-05-07T20:32:00.000-07:002007-05-07T20:32:00.000-07:00Yikes, although hardly surprising.Yikes, although hardly surprising.Jasonhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14293680750534843835noreply@blogger.com