Re: Was "Masterpiece Society" anti-abortion? And did Trek push politic
You make it sound like they're bloodthirsty and really have it in for the kid.
Imagine a hypothetical situation if you had a comatose person connected to your body in such a way that you can't be separated without the person dying; their body is getting all the nutrients and warmth from your body, needing your body to stay alive until presumably getting cured and released from you in 9 months time, in a very painful and quite dangerous procedure in which either or both of you can die. While it would be really great for you to try to be patient and sacrifice yourself for the good of the other being, to keep them alive despite the inconvenience and physical dangers involved (not to mention all sorts of social dangers and inconveniences, like getting fired from your job [yeah, it happens a lot, maybe not in USA or Western Europe, but believe me it does] or being unable to find one, or screwing up your education, driving your parents crazy, getting nasty and despising looks from your neighbors, possibly being ostracized from the society, etc.)... I really wouldn't feel I had the right to force you to do it, however you feel about it. If you decide to remove the other person's body from your own, ending their possibility of continuing their life... it's a nasty business, but it's your right to make that choice.
Now that is the gist of choice - the right to control your own body. And the moment when that other organism is out of your body, that issue is over. It's not the issue of your body anymore. You don't have the right to decide to stop the child from existing.
By your logic, you would have the right to kill the new born baby, since that also means you're choosing for the child not to exist at all.
It is morally praiseworthy to prevent a child from existing, but not to have the child and give it to people who want to take care of it and who could presumably be good parents to that child? 
So what you're saying is basically that living the life of a person who grew up adopted or in foster care is worse than never being born at all? If you haven't grown up with your biological parents, you're cursed, worthless and eternally unhappy?





Just curious - do you know someone who was adopted or grew up in foster care? Have you tried to tell them that?
They are far more disgusted at the very idea of fucking their adopted siblings or stepsisters/stepbrothers (if they have grown up together since early age).
It seems that, when it comes to the issue of 'who is really your family, the ones with the most similar DNA or the ones you grew up with?', biology means a lot less than most people tend to presume.

Or because one is more worthy and noble if their parents have died on them rather than abandoned them, and therefore the former should have more rights?
No, you didn't say just that, you said that the primary motive for abortion is that "the mother, and perhaps other lobbies involved (father, parents, society), don't want a kid to exist at all", i.e. even if they had a choice to immediately transfer the fetus to an incubator and stop being responsible for it (the child will be the responsibility of the social services), they'd still rather prevent the kid's existence. Why wouldn't they want a kid to exist if it's no burden on them?I don't. I presume it's because the mother isn't able to (because of her circumstances), or doesn't want to, or is scared of having to be responsible for the child (and I suspect that most abortions fall into category 1; adult, educated, well-off women tend to use contraception). Your view is very weird. Why the hell would anyone be against a kid existing at all?![]()
Or is that just a part of your agenda to portray women who have abortions as bloodthirsty murderers
even though that has very little to do with real life?
What did I say that made you imagine that I'm not pro-choice? Other than using language that accepts the reality that it is a nasty business, of course--but certainly no nastier than a heart surgeon's business, and probably less so.

Pro-life? What does that mean? I always found those terms annoying. It's not "pro-life", it's "against the right for abortion", Why can't Americans simply say it as it is: "against the right of abortion", "for the right of abortion" rather than fancy terms that are tailor made to support one's position. Of course I am in favor of life, who wouldn't be in favor of life? But that's not what the issue is about. And yes, I do think the fetus is alive - but it's not a person yet, it's not sentient, and it is not really 'distinguishable' from the mother because it is inside her body, feeding on her body, using its resources for growth. If you want an ugly but rather accurate comparison... I'll use the term I've heard from my best friend, who has a year and a half old infant she adores, really wanted to have, and is totally dedicated to: she said that pregnancy is in many ways like having a parasite in your body.Incidentally, the phrase you used, "life worth preserving," contains at least as much of a pro-life bias as anything I've said, since it implicitly contemplates a child as an extant life, distinguishable from the mother. You cannot preserve something which does not, yet, exist. And of course there's certainly no harm in not creating life (otherwise the directives from our major religions would be very different).
Imagine a hypothetical situation if you had a comatose person connected to your body in such a way that you can't be separated without the person dying; their body is getting all the nutrients and warmth from your body, needing your body to stay alive until presumably getting cured and released from you in 9 months time, in a very painful and quite dangerous procedure in which either or both of you can die. While it would be really great for you to try to be patient and sacrifice yourself for the good of the other being, to keep them alive despite the inconvenience and physical dangers involved (not to mention all sorts of social dangers and inconveniences, like getting fired from your job [yeah, it happens a lot, maybe not in USA or Western Europe, but believe me it does] or being unable to find one, or screwing up your education, driving your parents crazy, getting nasty and despising looks from your neighbors, possibly being ostracized from the society, etc.)... I really wouldn't feel I had the right to force you to do it, however you feel about it. If you decide to remove the other person's body from your own, ending their possibility of continuing their life... it's a nasty business, but it's your right to make that choice.
Now that is the gist of choice - the right to control your own body. And the moment when that other organism is out of your body, that issue is over. It's not the issue of your body anymore. You don't have the right to decide to stop the child from existing.
By your logic, you would have the right to kill the new born baby, since that also means you're choosing for the child not to exist at all.

Huh? What?This is the gist of choice--and it is proper to choose for a child to not exist at all, which is the gist of abortion. Preventing a being from not existing at all avoids the problem of harm entirely and is a morally neutral act--and, perhaps, on occasion, a morally praiseworthy act. Whereas abandoning an extant child for adoption is a morally suspect act, often the least of possible evils. (I can imagine situations where it could be morally praiseworthy, but this is not the usual case.)


So what you're saying is basically that living the life of a person who grew up adopted or in foster care is worse than never being born at all? If you haven't grown up with your biological parents, you're cursed, worthless and eternally unhappy?







Just curious - do you know someone who was adopted or grew up in foster care? Have you tried to tell them that?
If you know that you'd be a crappy parent, either because you're too immature or not ready to be a parent or because you feel you wouldn't be able to give the baby what it needs, the best option and the most morally praiseworthy thing is to make it possible for the baby to have a mommy or a daddy (or a mommy and daddy, or two mommies or two daddies) who will be able take care of it and love it and be good parents to it.Because now they have an extant child who wants his or her mommy. It is morally blameworthy, in itself, to turn away from the child. In certain cases, it is best to do so regardless, because of extrinsic factors--economic, social, and emotional ones.Why would they be?
So? Some people are selfish. Some people don't love their children. Some people abuse their children. Some people may love their children but are too screwed up psychologically to take care of them. There's a lot of crappy parents. And with so many people who love children and would want to take care of them, it is completely illogical to try to force people to do it against their will. You'd also be condemning the poor children to parents who don't want them and who'll just resent the fact that the damn brat has been forced on them.]In the decadent Federation, there are far fewer factors which would make raising a child undesirable, from the child's point of view. There's pretty decent logic in the maxim that anyone who does not want a child should be forced to raise it, but unlike in the present day, where extrinsic factors militate against the raising of a child, in the Fed it's probably just going to come off as selfish.
Much more harm is caused by biological parents who abuse, ignore, or simply don't love their children.Adoption is a far less tidy solution, since it does cause a kind of harm, even if that harm is as intangible as "my biological mother didn't want me."
Probably not nearly as much as the aspect of having grown up with really crappy parents.By no means do I mean to imply that adopted children are necessarily consigned to a life of emotional cripplehood. I'm just saying that this aspect has gotta suck.*
Actually, research shows that a huge number of people really like it, even if they do know - apart from the issue of the social stigma and feelings of guilt and shame that come because of it - and that telling your adopted children who their biological parents and siblings are is all the more likely to lead to them fucking their biological sisters/brothers/parents.*And not telling them is even worse! This is probably the most morally repugnant thing adoptive parents are capable of, because they think it's in the child's best interests. It is not, because no one likes accidentally fucking their own sister. Well, almost no one.
They are far more disgusted at the very idea of fucking their adopted siblings or stepsisters/stepbrothers (if they have grown up together since early age).
But how persuasive is this Oedipal theory nowadays? Because Freudian ideas dominated much of the 20th century, what is less well known is that, at the turn of the 19th century, a contemporary of Freud's, the Finnish social anthropologist Edward Westermarck, put forward the opposite view, based not on the theory of natural attraction but of natural aversion. According to Westermarck, children growing up in close proximity are not sexually attracted to each other as adults. Quite the contrary: the "Westermarck effect" meant that overfamiliarity and boredom automatically caused siblings and other close relatives raised together to go out of their way to avoid sexual contact. Westermarck also reasoned that, since we find the idea of sex with our relatives so distasteful, we developed moral codes and laws to ensure that society conformed to this "norm" to avoid any social disruption, shame or discrimination.
Although these ideas were rubbished by Freud for their lack of supportive evidence - despite his own inability to provide a scientific rationale for the Oedipus complex - in recent years evidence confirming the Westermarck effect among humans and other species continues to grow. By revealing more about what lies behind our choice of sexual partners, these findings may hold clues to the "mystery" of GSA.
In one ongoing study of children raised on Kiryat Yedidim, an Israeli kibbutz, between the 1950s and late 1960s, US and Israeli anthropologists were amazed to discover that the sabras - boys and girls of almost identical ages from different families - did not, as their parents hoped and anticipated, marry each other. As one of the first researchers, Melford Spiro, observed in 1958, the intimacy between these children, especially between the ages of seven and 12, could not have been greater. Not only did they shower, sleep and run around naked together and explore each other's bodies, as they approached puberty they began openly to play sex games, including intimate kissing, fondling and simulated, or attempted, sexual intercourse. Despite this climate of sexual freedom, by their mid-teens the girls, especially, displayed signs of shame and became hostile towards the boys, to the point of insisting on having unisex showers. At around 15, the girls became attracted to older students and young unmarried men in the kibbutz, admitting that they saw their peers as "brothers".
In a second phase of the study, when these children had grown up, it emerged that not only had no marriages taken place between any of the sabras from Kiryat Yedidim, and three other kibbutzim, but neither was there a single reported incident of sexual intercourse. Eventually, another team of sociologists analysed the records of almost all known kibbutz marriages, totalling nearly 3,000: in only 16 cases did members of the same peer group marry - and in these cases the couple had met only after the age of six.
In the 1960s, about the same time as the kibbutz studies were being concluded, Professor Arthur Wolf, an American anthropologist from Stanford University in California, travelled to Taiwan to study the effects of child-training methods on child behaviour. He ended up living for long periods in Chinese communities after discovering, by chance, that these had a high incidence of a certain type of arranged marriage - known as the sim-pua, or "minor form" - in which the bride was sent away as a young child by her parents to be brought up alongside her future husband as an adopted "daughter-in-law" of the family.
Wolf, now 70, has spent the past four decades examining the effects of this now almost extinct practice, and revealing its previously unforeseen consequences. "Although the age at which the girl went to the future husband's family was between three and five, in some areas of Taiwan they were under two. Many who entered these marriages were, in fact, nursed by their future mothers-in-law." When Wolf asked some of these surviving mothers-in-law why they did this, he was taken aback by their candour. "They explained that the children weren't treated as daughters: they were referred to as 'little daughter-in-law'. They'd say, 'It's better to raise your son's wife, because she will listen to what you tell her and won't always be talking about your son behind your back.' It was the classic mother-in-law strategy!"
A shortage of suitable brides in these developing communities in the late 19th and early 20th century made this "trade" in girl children an attractive proposition. Wolf discovered that the mothers of infant boys whose next child was a girl preferred to give her away and then adopt someone else's infant daughter as a future daughter-in-law. As in the kibbutzim, the future couple, very close in age, were effectively raised as siblings. Unlike the children from the kibbutz, however, they had to marry - and, as grown-ups, many refused to go through with the marriage, or did so only under threat of severe punishment. Some women, says Wolf, became prostitutes rather than marry their fiancée. And in marriage adultery was rife: "One man promised he would marry any other woman as long as it wasn't his fiancée, although she was very attractive. This was more than lack of sexual interest - it was a complete sexual indifference towards their intended partner, which, as Westermarck claimed, led to disgust and aversion when the act was merely thought of or became a possibility."
It seems that, when it comes to the issue of 'who is really your family, the ones with the most similar DNA or the ones you grew up with?', biology means a lot less than most people tend to presume.
Why? Because there are no abandonees? That's about as likely as the Federation literally having 0.0000 rates of poverty and crime.I think that's more in line with the Federation being largely comprised of generous people. I'm sure there are orphanages, but they'd be for, like, orphans, not abandonees.and 2) with all that opulence and high standards of living that we keep hearing about in Trek, there should be no problem finding parents to adopt, or at least foster care, and that any 'orphanages' are hundreds of years (well, literally in this case) more advanced and better furnished (in material as well as personnel) than today. Apparently, even 6-year Klingon children can find Human parents willing to adopt them.

Or because one is more worthy and noble if their parents have died on them rather than abandoned them, and therefore the former should have more rights?

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