In the Upfront Magazine, “Designer
Babies,” the author Patricia Smith talks about how scientists are learning how
to genetically engineer babies’ traits and genes for both medical and social
reasons. I think that medically this will be good for society because it will
help prevent certain diseases that result from genetic defects. However, changing
and determining babies’ more physical and personal traits (such as height, eye
color, IQ, etc.) challenges my moral code, and I believe that it is unethical.
The
first reason that I think that this is unethical is because it would not be
good for society. Eventually, if choosing babies’ traits became normal, there
would not be any individuality anymore in society, and more and more people
will feel that they have to look a certain way in order to be accepted. There
would be no more flaws, or talent, or distinctive personalities. I think that,
even though we may not love them, our flaws help to make up who we are. And
even sometimes, we, ourselves, are the only ones that see certain flaws in
ourselves. People determining what they think is “perfect,” and putting it into
another human being is very wrong.
The
second reason that I disagree with this is because I believe that there is no
“right” way for a person to look. It’s just a matter of people’s opinions.
Social media portrays that the celebrities and models that you see in magazines
are perfect; perfect hair, perfect personality, perfect look, and the perfect
body. It tricks society into feeling that in order to be beautiful, we need to
look a certain way. However, I believe that beauty is in the eye of the
beholder, and that no one look is perfect. In addition, I think that fate
should decide what a person ends up looking like, and not us.
In
conclusion, genetically engineering a baby in order to give it desired physical
or personal traits, goes against what I believe in. I think that people should
be born naturally and that everyone has flaws. Even in a picture perfect world,
there will still be flaws. I believe that as we grow up, we learn to embrace
our flaws, and by changing them, society would be ruined.
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