Under what circumstances or conditions do people believe that procreation should be regulated; or do they believe in completely unregulated procreation. — IvoryBlackBishop
Well first of all it would have to be possible to regulate it in a manner that doesn't cause massive followup problems. China's one child policy is a cautionary tale here. — Echarmion
the popular myth merely unilateral or blanket statements based on some silly and highly questionable pop cultural myth or axiom accepted or taken for granted on the basis of faith, nonsensical circular reasoning and rote regurgitation outdated 19th century myths and archaisms archaic and highly debatable or questionable or easily disprovable and contradictroy — IvoryBlackBishop
↪SonOfAGun It would be much better to take sperm samples and sterilise men. Less invasive, easier to store, and insemination, when required, more certain and safer. and young sperm would be lees liable to produce birth defects. Surprised you didn't suggest it yourself. — unenlightened
As you know, under such conditions, human female eggs can last up to around forty years. — SonOfAGun
No, if you sterilise the men, you can leave the eggs where they are, and they will also last 40 years or so. — unenlightened
↪SonOfAGun Well, you'd just have to lock them up from the beginning of puberty until you have a sufficient sample, or better still, just pick a few of the best for that program, and sterilise the rest at birth. — unenlightened
Lol, yah that is not a Recipe for civil revolt. — SonOfAGun
There's always going to be some resistance to this sort of program until it becomes traditional. — unenlightened
Or we could stop being total pricks and decide it's a deeply repugnant and immoral idea in the first place. :vomit: — unenlightened
Not concerned with the morality of the question only the feasibility. — SonOfAGun
is it more moral to let people starve to death when one could do something to stabilize the problem? You know that we are not talking about an if but when right? — SonOfAGun
Oh good. Well I can confirm that it is much much cheaper and safer to sterilise men than women. And of course the puberty problem applies to both sexes equally. One solution would be to make sterilisation voluntary, but to confine unsterilised men and allow them access to women only as the population requirements arise. If you are not opposed to abortion, you could also selectively abort most of the male foetuses and reduce the crime levels at the same time. — unenlightened
It rather depends what one would do. Feed them would be good, Nuke them would be bad. But that's just my opinion... — unenlightened
↪SonOfAGun The bigger problem, in my opinion, would be to figure out a system that determines who can procreate and when, without causing unintended shifts in either the genepool or the culture. — Echarmion
You seem to be very emotionally attached to this question. — SonOfAGun
Indeed, but those eggs are immature, and will mature usually one at a time from puberty. If there is an artificial way to mature eggs, I am not familiar with it. Normally, eggs are harvested from a female by stimulating with hormones to mature several eggs at once; I'm not sure that would be even possible with a pre-pubescant girl.Females are born with all of the eggs they will ever produce. so no, it is not a question of puberty where females are concerned. — SonOfAGun
What I have proposed is the most morally soft thing I could think of — SonOfAGun
Survival of the fittest has always been the way. I don't see any reason to change that. Those who can afford to feed their children will be granted licenses. — SonOfAGun
Indeed, but those eggs are immature, and will mature usually one at a time from puberty. If there is an artificial way to mature eggs, I am not familiar with it. Normally, eggs are harvested from a female by stimulating with hormones to mature several eggs at once; I'm not sure that would be even possible with a pre-pubescant girl. — unenlightened
What you have proposed is that other people, women, the poor, anyone but you and your kind should face interventions and restrictions. — unenlightened
There is no wealth gene. On the contrary, wealth being inherited leads to unwarranted survival and so weakens the gene pool. Which explains a deal of idiocy and ugliness. — unenlightened
I'm not sure that would be even possible with a pre-pubescant girl. — unenlightened
↪IvoryBlackBishop I think there's only one way to regulate population that doesn't risk jeopardizing the moral integrity of a society, and that is to make people refrain from procreation out of their own volition.
The talk in the comments of forced sterilization and selective abortion should show you where the other path leads to: straight down into the rabbit hole
How to make people refrain from procreation voluntarily?
First, stop promoting the idea that everybody should have children, or that children are a fundamental part of leading a fulfilling life. Instead, present them as equally valid choices, and let people figure out what suits them best. Currently, I think the societal norm is heavily skewed towards having children. Not having children is sometimes seen as sad or weird. That's a problem, because it creates external pressures in people who perhaps otherwise would not have chosen to have children.
Second, educate people thoroughly on the responsibilities of a parent and the implications of putting another human being on this Earth. This should bring people to the realization that simply "because I want to" is not a sufficient basis for having children and that they should heavily weigh the interest of their (future) child. Furthermore, it should discourage people with a history of substance abuse, crime, mental disorder or genetic deficiencies from having children by confronting them with the possible consequences of such a choice.
Bad parenting is the cause of much grief in this world. However, two wrongs don't (and can never) make a right. Draconian laws can never be the answer. — Tzeentch
The eggs can be reintroduced for maturation. — SonOfAGun
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