DPutna17 said:
Jonluw said:
DPutna17 said:
They should be allowed to procreate. It would be cruel to rob them of the chance to have children plus a lot of mental disabilities aren't hereditary so it wouldn't make a difference.
Suppose they are mentally challenged enough to not be able to raise a child properly. Would it not be cruel to rob that child of its chance to have a comfortable life?
Even though some disabilities aren't hereditary, that doesn't mean you should be able to have a child no matter what disability you have. Say I wan't to have sex with a girl, but I happen to have chlamydia. However; according to your logic, since cancer doesn't spread via sexual contact, it is fine for me to have unprotected sex with this girl.
1. Just because they should be allowed to procreate doesn't mean a social services can't come by every so often to check if the environment the child is living in is up to scratch.
2. Just because one partner is mentally challenged doesn't mean the other one is, so the child could still have a pretty comfortable life.
3. Even if you wore a condom there is still a chance the disease could spread anyway. Kind of like how two perfectly healthy people can have a mentally challenged child. So there really is no way to 100% prevent mental illness and if we are going to prevent people who could have mentally challenged children from procreating we may as well sterilize the whole world. Also there is no guarantee that a mentally challenged parent will produce a mentally challenged child even if the disease is hereditary.
1. That does put a burden on society though. I'm not all that comfortable paying for someone else's child.
2. I was mainly thinking of a scenario where both parents are disabled. A scenario where one parent is capable of raising the child would certainly be preferrable.
3. Yes, 2 people with no mental disabilities can have a disabled child. However, the chances of that happening are tiny compared to the chances of two people with a hereditary disease having a mentally disabled child.
Let me put it this way: A professional baseball batter may occasionally miss a swing, that doesn't mean you should let a person with a 50% hit rate on the team, just because they can both miss the ball. The difference doesn't lie in whether mental disabilites occur at all, it lies in how significant the chances of it occuring are.
But listen: I've been discussing this all day. I can't be bothered to keep going. Try reading from page 6 and out to find my replies if you want arguments against procreation between mentally disabled people.