Moonie wrote:If a child is brain damaged to the point of being for ever in a vegetative state, and also in pain, I personally would have no qualms about ending its terrible life before it's properly begun.
I could, to some extent, go along with that. My brother was born physically and mentally handicapped and was given six months, max, to live in 1949 - he lived to his early thirties.
However, on an hypothetical scale from permanent vegetative state (PVS) to some unknown level where some "experts" deem euthanasia a benefit, my brother would have been near the PVS end. I know for a fact that had my mother and father been given a choice to terminate they would have turned it down regardless of the wishes of the medical experts. I bet others would have terminated at the drop of a hat from anywhere on the scale.
What worries me it that the other end of the scale is one of drifting sands. I fear the decisions will be made by people to protect their lifestyles rather than have the child. We have turned into water and the easy option has become the default one.
Having said that, it might only be a temporary measure and only applied to those involved in some form of terrible accident. We are well down the road of testing the DNA of foetuses so that they can be discarded as soon as possible should they not be "perfect".