Some people are keen on criticizing people (mostly Americans) who doubt the validity of Darwinism, and/or macro-evolution. How many of you are willing to decide public policy issues on that basis?
Here's an example:
Our bodies evolved to store fat and handle nutrition as hunter-gatherers. Therefore, in an era of industrial farming and processed food, obesity and related diseases such as diabetes are becoming major killers and expensive in the public health sector.
Right now, our public policy appears to be rejection of evolution. We keep people alive who would ordinarily die in nature, and we are stunting our species' development as a result. Instead of keeping these people alive, why don't we allow them to die, and if necessary, exterminate anybody with recessive genes linked to these health issues.
Now, I see certain problems with this. The biggest problem is the investment made in certain people who are still valuable for our economy. Skilled workers are expensive to replace, and it would take years for any replacements to learn the ins and outs of a trade that only years of experience can deliver. But I think that the overall benefits of a human race without genetic weakness outweigh the economic costs of the shortage in labor supply.
This is just an example. What do you all think?
Here's an example:
Our bodies evolved to store fat and handle nutrition as hunter-gatherers. Therefore, in an era of industrial farming and processed food, obesity and related diseases such as diabetes are becoming major killers and expensive in the public health sector.
Right now, our public policy appears to be rejection of evolution. We keep people alive who would ordinarily die in nature, and we are stunting our species' development as a result. Instead of keeping these people alive, why don't we allow them to die, and if necessary, exterminate anybody with recessive genes linked to these health issues.
Now, I see certain problems with this. The biggest problem is the investment made in certain people who are still valuable for our economy. Skilled workers are expensive to replace, and it would take years for any replacements to learn the ins and outs of a trade that only years of experience can deliver. But I think that the overall benefits of a human race without genetic weakness outweigh the economic costs of the shortage in labor supply.
This is just an example. What do you all think?
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