Posted: Fri Nov 02, 2007 8:03 pm
It seems clear to me that we (as a society) are nowhere near understanding the science of homosexuality. People have been "breeding" for thousands of years, and if you read books like John Boswell's Same-Sex Unions in Premodern Europe and others that trace homosexuality through the ages, it's been around for as long as people have been breeding.
That, to me, is (anecdotal) evidence that the gene, or whatever it is that triggers homosexuality, isn't something that can be bred out of a population.
Thinking that parents will someday be making choices for their children before they're born is terrifying. Parents (sometimes) do enough damage to their children with the choices they make after they're born.
Who's to say that changing the child's hair or eye color to what the parents think is best is going to be what's best for the child? It's conceivable to me that a guy and a girl who might have met up, had a great relationship, many children, grandchildren, etc., might not meet up because of changes the parents made to their children's physicality. Then again, the reverse could be true. The changes they make could keep two horribly inept people who would sadly reproduce a litter of losers, from ever meeting.
The above paragraph overly simplifies how changes can affect fetuses, and the person they become, but it's just to serve as an example.
But the gay question. If you're a parent, and you find out that your child will be gay, what do you do? No parent, even the most liberal, open-minded parent, *wants* their child to be gay, simply because being gay means that their child is likely due for a fair amount of difficulty, adjusting to society's expectations, and it will likely last their entire life, especially toward the end of their life (as it was, oddly enough, in the beginning). An 80-year-old homosexual has even fewer social outlets than a fourteen-year-old homosexual. Unless they're extremely luck and have a wonderful, large, supportive family.
That, to me, is (anecdotal) evidence that the gene, or whatever it is that triggers homosexuality, isn't something that can be bred out of a population.
Thinking that parents will someday be making choices for their children before they're born is terrifying. Parents (sometimes) do enough damage to their children with the choices they make after they're born.
Who's to say that changing the child's hair or eye color to what the parents think is best is going to be what's best for the child? It's conceivable to me that a guy and a girl who might have met up, had a great relationship, many children, grandchildren, etc., might not meet up because of changes the parents made to their children's physicality. Then again, the reverse could be true. The changes they make could keep two horribly inept people who would sadly reproduce a litter of losers, from ever meeting.
The above paragraph overly simplifies how changes can affect fetuses, and the person they become, but it's just to serve as an example.
But the gay question. If you're a parent, and you find out that your child will be gay, what do you do? No parent, even the most liberal, open-minded parent, *wants* their child to be gay, simply because being gay means that their child is likely due for a fair amount of difficulty, adjusting to society's expectations, and it will likely last their entire life, especially toward the end of their life (as it was, oddly enough, in the beginning). An 80-year-old homosexual has even fewer social outlets than a fourteen-year-old homosexual. Unless they're extremely luck and have a wonderful, large, supportive family.