As someone preparing to move to the US, thanks guys. You're scaring me
So, let's see. Unsurprisingly, Vikarion is taking the hardline, pure logic approach and doing terribly at presenting it. Never go into marketing, dude, you'd be horrible at it
Let's extract a few interesting issues here that have been kind of skated over. The core issue is, at the end of the day, one of resources. They are not endless, and that's a problem that's becoming more awkward in every area as the world population grows. Some kind of priority system is thus needed. Ollie talked about how this already happens - there might be a basic premise of 'help everyone', but investment vs result considerations apply. Something did spark my interest in his post though - essentially, 'euthanasia is bad'.
Allow me to open a can of worms: why?
Why is it more justifiable to leave someone living in agony and/or up to their eyeballs on medication, than to give them peace? Why is it ok to turn off a life support machine for someone who will never awaken, but not to allow someone living half a life to depart on their own terms? Why are we more humane to our pets than to some humans in the same circumstances? If someone wants to die, and their continued life is only going to be a drain on resources (and in most of the stories one hears, on the emotional fortitude of their loved ones), then why is it morally 'wrong' to allow them to? Life is not some sacred gift that must be treasured and preserved at all costs.
I'll clarify that last bit before the pitchforks come out - life is important. It's our most important possession. Letting go of it should not be done lightly, and there is a
vital difference between not wanting to live, and wanting to die - a question that applies to suicide in general, not just euthanasia. The former is apathy. The latter is a choice. It's just not a choice that we're generally allowed to make.
Speaking of choices.
Eugenics is distinctly dubious road, and I'm not going to amble down that particular discussion, but there is a related consideration - genetic screening. Technology has advanced to the point where we can trace a lot of genetic diseases, quite apart from the more primitive side of family histories and such. I can remember a number of years back a fairly heated debate over here about whether people should be allowed to screen out unborn children based upon any conditions they might have.
I was, and still am, in favour. I'm not a sideline watcher here, either - I have a pretty serious genetic disorder myself. I'm just a carrier, but my mother has the full form, and it's not remotely pretty. I have voluntarily removed myself from the gene pool on that basis - I intend to never have children, as quite apart from other considerations, I have no interest in allowing that gene to continue.
I can remember being asked how I would react if someone with a genetic disorder had come up to me and said "If they'd done this, I wouldn't be here to speak to you." My response was essentially "But you are. Your point?"
I suppose the point underlying both of these topics, and others that I haven't raised, is that there's a strange obsession with 'life at any cost'. Not everyone necessarily believes that in private, but that is the dominant moral judgement from what I see in the world, and it's really dumb. Life is not the be-all and end-all.
One final amusing tidbit for the non-americans: Obamacare, that harbinger of the apocalypse if you listen to the Republicans, is actually based upon a system instituted in Massachusetts by their former governor. That system had a similar little moniker - Romneycare.
US politics is so very silly.