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03-28-2003, 06:33 AM | #11 |
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The problem with this concept, is who decides? How are they monitored? Do we trust a government agency with this kind of responsibility? I would be hard pressed to think of any power more easily abused by a government than deciding who gets to have kids.
The risks of implementation, I believe, far outweigh the benefits - especially if your goal is a free society. Jamie |
03-28-2003, 07:43 AM | #12 |
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License and training
I have worked with sexually and physically abused children a long time.
One thing I and everyone else has noticed is that the cycle repeats. Abused children grow up to be abusers of their own children. So two proposals: 1. If any people are disallowed not from having but from raising children, it should be those who are abusers and potentially abuse victims, since they tend to carry on this bad tradition. (By the way, 98% to 100% of people in prison were abused as children. Disallowing abusers to raise children might go far toward emptying the jails.) 2. I believe everyone should have to undergo training and get a license of minimal competency before raising children. Most countries require licenses to drive, be a plumber, be an electrician, and so on. One can do far, far more damage by raising a child badly than driving badly or plumbing badly. Yes, I know there are different theories and traditions on what constitutes good and bad child-rearing; but I think we could reach a consensus on certain things to impart and certain things to avoid--and how to do it. |
03-28-2003, 09:15 AM | #13 | |
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paul30 -
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For example, my sister was abused as a child but is currently raising 2 and 4 year old sons, the younger with special needs, and is by far the most devoted, caring and responsible parent I have ever met. I do believe she would cut her own arm off before laying a hand on either of them. I have more thoughts on the OP but need more coffee first... |
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03-28-2003, 09:43 AM | #14 | |||
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Re: not everyone should be allowed to have children
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I would attribute the increased divorce rates more to equality of the sexes. A woman is no longer bound to a husband to provide for her livelihood. Quote:
Besides that, there are good genetic reasons for random coupling. Quote:
-Mike... |
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03-28-2003, 11:51 AM | #15 | |
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I think Psychic does have a point, raising children in a seriously defected envirnment might really screw them up, leading to more crime, more depression, stuff like that. I think it's (nearly) impossible to put any system of this kind of birth control in practice though, people won't accept it. |
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03-28-2003, 12:03 PM | #16 | |||
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there is no space here to go through the evoultion of social psychology, but you can compare "the victorian England" with the current England. or compare the conservative societies with the less conservatives societies. the buttom line is: people tend to be less content with their spouse if other options are readily available and within reach of sight. that what produces a greater percentage of such household in liberal societies. |
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03-28-2003, 12:25 PM | #17 | ||||
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03-28-2003, 01:04 PM | #18 | |
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-Mike... |
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03-28-2003, 08:16 PM | #19 | |
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The institution of regulated reproduction leads immediately to things like forced abortion or adoption (a woman being forced to put her child up for adoption) or forced sterilization. This would, of course, be controlled by some government agency. If a person didn't submit to forced sterilization, would we drag them in and perform surgery on them against their will? Would we hold women down and inject them with birth control drugs? Some women have very bad reactions to these by the way. If a woman had an unauthorized pregnancy, would we tie her down and abort, or pull the newborn from her arms and cart it away? This is why your analogy was so ill-formed. Reproduction is a physiological process. You can deny someone a driver's license easily without Orwellian consequences, but to deny someone the right to exercise bodily function requires a level of government authoritarianism that is simply lunacy. Ed |
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03-28-2003, 09:53 PM | #20 |
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Good idea but application is impossible
No offense nermal but it would be quite dumb for any western government to restrict the right to reproduce. With the fertility rates decreasing at an alarming rate and the populace getting older and older, passing a law to further limit births would roughly be a social suicide.
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