T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
316.1 | Feticide | RUTLND::CONRAD | | Wed Jun 10 1987 16:25 | 46 |
| RE: .0
I recently read an article in the Readers Digest (I am very
intellectual, aren't I?) about this very subject. It seems that
the story took place in China. Anyway, to summarize; China (as
everyone might be aware of) is experiencing the after-effects and pain
of a population boom. It wasnt too long ago that they decided to set
up a child quota system for families - 1 new child per family.
A writer (the author of this story) stayed in China for a while
and experienced something quite painful with regards to this child
quota issue. It seems that he befriended a family during his stay
- mother, father and little daughter.
In China, as in other countries, the people put a high value on
having a male offspring. So, needless to say, the mother tried a
second time to have a baby boy, and quickly became pregnant.
She immediately went into hiding, waiting until she was 8 months
along. Finally the authorities caught up with her, and forced her
to go to a special place - where all mothers go when they are caught
trying to bring a new life into the world, just 1 over quota.
The writer describes how she was forced to drink a medicine
that killed the fetus inside her....needless to say, she had to.
She had no choice in the matter.
Its this kind of "abortion" that makes me sick to the stomach.
How can one call this "abortion"? This is insanity, and is really
feticide.....especially when the pregnancy is terminated in such
an inhuman, totally abhorrent way! Certainly something different
could have been done in the situation. That fully formed little boy
(oh yes, it was male) could have lived, had he been delivered in a
hospital. And if they didnt want him, send him over to us here in
the United States, where the waiting lists for adopting infants
are so long, some poor couples have to wait years before they are
given the chance to love and nurture a newborn baby.
Linda
|
316.2 | probability of giving birth to a Chinese baby | VIDEO::OSMAN | type video::user$7:[osman]eric.six | Wed Jun 10 1987 18:04 | 7 |
|
In some countries, parents are afraid to have more than four kids. They've
heard that about every fifth child born in the world is Chinese :)
|
316.3 | *her* | GLINKA::GREENE | | Thu Jun 11 1987 07:27 | 5 |
| .2 reminds me of the population explosion. Something like every
17 seconds, a woman gives birth to a baby. We just need to find
that woman and stop her!
Penelope
|
316.4 | Certain animals... | FLOWER::JASNIEWSKI | | Thu Jun 11 1987 09:08 | 8 |
|
Certain animal species, most notably Bears and Lions, will kill
their own offspring. So the practice occurrs in Nature. 'Been watching
"wild world of animals" too much. I dont know what this has to do
with the *human* species, though.
JJJ
|
316.5 | | SPMFG1::CHARBONND | | Thu Jun 11 1987 09:34 | 14 |
| .12 reminds me of an article i read several years ago.
The chinese had found a method of predicting the sex of
an unborn child (amniocentesis, maybe ? I forget.) The
method had about a 98% accuracy rate. They tested about
100 women with this method. Thirty women chose to have
abortions. 29 of the 30 were expecting girl children.
In a recent article on deer population, biologists
found that when deer populations reached or exceeded the
carrying capacity of an area, more bucks than does were
produced. in areas not fully populated to the limit of
available feed/shelter, more does than bucks were born.
I'm not certain but it seems that the Chinese are doing
through brutality what nature does (genetically ?)
|
316.6 | | WHOARU::WONG | | Thu Jun 11 1987 10:16 | 8 |
| >>> < Note 316.2 by VIDEO::OSMAN "type video::user$7:[osman]eric.six" >
>>> -< probability of giving birth to a Chinese baby >-
>>>
>>>In some countries, parents are afraid to have more than four kids. They've
>>>heard that about every fifth child born in the world is Chinese :)
I believe that's "every fourth child"...:-)
|
316.7 | Imponderables Abound | HPSCAD::WALL | I see the middle kingdom... | Thu Jun 11 1987 16:35 | 22 |
|
Who are we calling 'modern American society?' Considering the rate
of violent crime in this country, I'm not sure that American society
places all that high a value on human life. What we might call
'the American ideal' places considereable value on being allowed
to live one's life as one pleases -- with what Jefferson called
our inalienable rights.
I don't think societies which place different values on human life
are inherently bad or good. 'Human life' can be hard to define.
And to judge such a society out of the context of the problems it
is facing is a bad thing. The Chinese have to find some way of
controlling their population, or nature will control it for them.
I don't think we can understand the pressures of that sort of problem.
'Until we've walked a mile in their shoes' has to be part of the
answer to that kind of question.
I don't think there's an absolute answer to Nigel's third question.
Philosphers have been trading counter-examples over it since the
beginning of civilization.
DFW
|
316.8 | Moral superiority? | FGVAXU::RITZ | It's life and life only... | Tue Jun 30 1987 15:47 | 54 |
|
In a class I took in the early 70's on international nutrition (taught
by former members of the Brookings Institution and USAID) it was flatly
stated that infanticide was the *leading* form of birth control in the
world. My argument is that even this act must be understood in the
situation in which it occurs.
To try and compare, let alone equate, the environments in which one
makes moral decisions is fatuous at best coming from the privileged
situations most of us find ourselves in. The phenomenon known as
demographic shift illustrates the difference between undeveloped
countries and others:
Child (<6 yrs.) mortality rates have historically hovered around
60-70%; in many societies, children were not even considered to be
'persons' until they were six or seven. Most of this mortality can be
attributed to a diagnosis of 'non-specific' (including amoebic
dysentery, staph, salmonella, shigella, etc.) gastroenteritis
communicated primarily through the contaminated water supply. When
modern sewage treatment facilities (such as pit toilets) and
antibiotics are introduced, infant mortality rates are reduced
drastically. Since children are often quite necessary for the economic
survival of the nuclear family unit (or at least for the survival of
the oldest generation) in agrarian or gathering societies, couples that
previously had to have a dozen children in order to assure the survival
of one or two now find themselves with a large family. In developed
countries, a corresponding drop in the birth rate (the 'demographic
shift') will occur about twenty years later, as the society acclimates
itself to the new situation. In developing countries, the rapid
increase in population produces severe social and economic problems,
especially when it coincides with natural disasters and political
upheavals. Moreover, the demographic shift may never occur, due to lack
of education or social pressures.
Scientific American published a special issue in September of 1976 that
focused on international nutrition. The figures given there may be a
bit old, but this fact remains the same: You can't judge others by
moral criteria based on life in the US. It's a dangerous fantasy that
leads to a ludicrous sense of moral superiority - ludicrous because the
reality is that it's just technological and military superiority;
dangerous because a sense of jingoistic self-righteousness is used to
publicly justify most of the US' military adventures in the third
world. One can understand feeling horror at the thought of infanticide,
but what about the untold suffering and death that result from
overpopulation and starvation? Whose fault is it that millions of
children die at the breast from their mothers' malnutrition? No one's?
What about those in this country who are directly responsible for
driving the global prices of food higher and higher? Or for the fact
that food and medical care remain *commodities*, rather than rights,
even in our enlightened(!) culture. The concept of evil isn't an
absolute...
JJRitz
|
316.9 | Favored and unfavored can change | SSDEVO::YOUNGER | I haven't lost my mind - it's Backed-up on tape somewhere | Thu Jul 02 1987 23:40 | 10 |
| It seems to me that if a population sets itself up in some way such
that there is a gross uneveness in the numbers of male and female
children, that in the next generation, the currently unfavored sex
will have to become the favored one, because the favored sex is
generally unable to find mates. For example, if 4 out of 5 Chinese
women carrying a girl abort her, and 1 out of 5 of these women abort
a boy, most of their sons will remain batchelors.
Elizabeth
|
316.10 | Consequences | REGENT::MERRILL | Glyph, and the world glyphs with u,... | Wed Sep 30 1987 09:26 | 24 |
| Utilitarianism, "the greatest good for the greatest number", has a
tendency to subvert the individual's rights to a single right: the
right to self-sacrifice for society. This leads not only to abortion,
infanticide, but also to kamakazi solders, and euthenasia.
In a "Free Market" it is believed that individuals making choices
for their own best interest, are also ultimately acting in the best
interests of the whole society. I do not believe that, because it
has lead US people to have abortions for a selfish reason: money!
Aren't the top three "aborting" nations in the world
Soviet Union, United States, and China in descending order?! It
would seen that .0's concern about the "price on a life" is independent
of ideology, and more dependent on the means or lack thereof.
The chinese are using other forms of birth control so effectively
that they are now concerned about raising a generaton of "only
children" who have trouble cooperating with their peers! I read
that France has SUCH a NEGATIVE birth-death rate that they give free natal
care to mother and child. These are some of the practical consequences
of a society's failure to value the life of the unborn sufficiently.
Rick
Merrill
|
316.11 | 316.10 -- could we avoid pure emotionalism? | BRONS::BURROWS | Jim Burrows | Wed Sep 30 1987 13:41 | 23 |
| Aw, come on...
You really don't have argue by slinging mud. Your one line
description of utiltarianism is moderately off the mark, and the
bald assertion that utilitarianism (or even the restricted view
of it reflected in your summary) leads to infantacide and
kamakazi soldiers is shear emotionalism. There's certainly
no evidence that such a causal link is inevitable or unarguable.
Similarly, the number of philosophical positions that fly thye
banner of the "Free Market" are extremely wide, and such a
hand-waving reference as you have made is a terrible way to
start any sort of analysis or discussion.
The only purpose sereved by this kind of argument is to excite
someone's emotions. You offend utilitarians or free market
advocates by making bald statements about them which they are
sure to believe are completely false, and give no supporting
reasoning, nor show any serious understanding of their position,
and what have you acheived? You have raised the emotion
temperature, and convinced them of nothing.
JimB.
|
316.12 | it all depends on how you look at it... | STUBBI::B_REINKE | where the sidewalk ends | Wed Sep 30 1987 14:57 | 2 |
| re .10 or perhaps we could be talking about making some real inroads
towards controlling runaway population growth.
|
316.13 | it's not that bad... | YODA::BARANSKI | Law?!? Hell! Give me *Justice*! | Wed Sep 30 1987 15:34 | 12 |
| RE: .11,.12 RE: .10
I don't think it's really all that emotionalism...
I think that the principles mentioned in .10 carried to the extreme, and applied
to the topic, 'the value of life', have the conclusions mentioned.
This is not to say simply that if you believe in any of these principles, you
*must* believe the the conclusion is 'right'. True, .10 has rather undeveloped
descriptions of the principles, but I follow the logic of it...
Jim.
|
316.14 | *SOMETHING* MUST BE DONE | VAXUUM::MUISE | | Thu Oct 01 1987 10:25 | 10 |
| Extremely tough question.
Although I do not have an answer, I have a question:
Just what *is* China to do?
jacki
|
316.15 | | NEXUS::GORTMAKER | the Gort | Thu Oct 01 1987 23:32 | 14 |
| China has few options.
1.Continue birth control programs including abortion and prevention.
2. Find another million sq. miles to grow food and house the people.
3. Die a slow painful death from lack of food,housing.
For a better understanding of china i suggest reading 'Journey into
China' from National geographic. This book gives a great deal of
insight to the people,their ways and the problems they face.
The population problem is discussed as well as the action being
taken to solve the problem. It is indeed a very serious one with
few easy solutions.
-j
|
316.16 | Use Reaganomics, yup that's the ticket! | PERV::ELN03 | Vikas Sontakke SERPNT::SONTAKKE | Fri Oct 02 1987 11:12 | 6 |
| RE: .15
Invade and take over United States of America for the extra million
sq miles of land.
- Vikas
|
316.17 | | NEXUS::GORTMAKER | the Gort | Fri Oct 02 1987 18:39 | 2 |
| re.16 You got the message.
|
316.18 | | VIKING::TARBET | Margaret Mairhi | Mon Oct 05 1987 09:10 | 6 |
| Just think: if *every* society restricted its population growth such
that there were functionally no "excess" people (as determined by un-
or underemployment, homeless population, etc.) what might we have
for a world?
=maggie
|
316.20 | Be careful what you wish for... | MARCIE::JLAMOTTE | AAY-UH | Mon Oct 05 1987 19:55 | 11 |
| Although misery, poverty and disease are difficult to understand
they are the ways that we can express our love for our fellow humans.
To try to manage the world and create the perfect atmosphere is
a task to great for any mortal. Perfection and an environment without
problems will create something far worse than poverty.
Ayn Rand described it better than I ever could in her book titled
'Anthem'. I wonder if it was coincidence that she wrote the book
in 1938 the year the Social Security Act was enacted.
|