Awesome idea about genetically engineering pets / animals!
Considering the current treatment of primates by research labs, it would be logically inconsistent and unreasonable to suggest that a full out CRISPR trial could not be conducted on them.
When this were done at the limits of the current CRISPR technology, such primates would far exceed the intellectual / psychological / social ability of any human.
Say hello to our new eugenic Pan troglodytes overlords!
If you are so opposed to helping humans with genetic illnesses, that is perfectly fine. Just be ready to accept the consequences.
Evolution favors those organisms that are more adaptively suited to survival. If you feel that it is somehow immoral to be more adaptive... Great, get out of the way, and let directed evolution
create a life form that is more adaptive. In 100 years, humans could be just another evolutionary footnote.
Get ready for Planets of the Apes!
Regarding the human right to euthanasia, we have had a front row seat on the hypocrisy on this one. Our government, along with probably every other socialized democracy in the world
is under intense financial strain relating to the emerging health obligations that have been made. A few years ago our loved one with dementia developed serious dehydration related
to swallowing problems. {This has been almost the only emergency that we have faced caring for her over last few decades.} Our medical system did everything possible not to provide us
with proper medical care.
Once our loved finally arrived at hospital in critical condition, it took a month or two to stabilize her condition. During that time we had endless rounds of palliative consults regarding whether
we wanted to continue feeding her. Several serious medical complications occurred during her stay. We were told that a G-Tube could only be provided if both power of attorneys signed off.
Legal authority even had to be provided for an NG tube. Apparently these legal changes have only been recently instituted. Up to this point feeding people with dementia had always been
considered the only possible legally acceptable response. Not doing so would have been considered to be criminal negligence.
Since her arrival back home several years ago there have been no medical emergencies to speak of, even while none of our family has any medical training regarding dementia care. Without exception
every single person involved with her care has told us without equivocation that the care being received in a home context far exceeds anything that could be offered from a professional nursing home.
At the same time, over this time we have seen ongoing reductions in the services provided through home care. On an almost weekly basis we see reductions in the standard of care that can be provided.
Our government is truly desperate for money. We could never have believe how desperate. We have recently been coping with a decubitus ulcer. It is truly shocking to see how reluctant they have been
to provide the care that is needed to treat this.
It is horrifying to even contemplate what the standard of care might be in 5-10 years when the dementia crisis has escalated further. The one life saver for government is that all of these changes can
occur without most people having any idea of what is happening.
Many patients float through the system and it is not apparent to them or their family members what is happening behind the scenes. Since our loved one is in a home environment, we can see exactly what is happening. Our health care team do not even pretend anymore that this is not happening. When the bed pads provided for our loved one dramatically declined in quality, no one could possibly deny it had happened. We just all laughed in total disbelief.
We had not fully appreciated that dementing illness does not greatly diminish life expectancy. A massive cerebral capacity is not required to exist. There are many animals (birds?) that appear to have quite modest cranial endowments. Many neuro-degenerative illnesses when treated to the limit of proper caregiving can result in prolonged disease presence. For example the average life expectancy of someone with dementia approaches 90 years. Even this might not be the maximum possible. We will have to see to what extent governments respect the rights of people with dementia in the future. From current evolving standard of care, it would seem clear that we are entering
a new dark age of human rights based on the severe resource constraints surrounding dementia and other medical conditions. As previously noted, Europe is now at the forefront of this trend.
So that is our perspective on the fundamental human right to end one's own life: It is more a fundamental imperative of socialist societies to redefine the resources that they are willing to provide to the most vulnerable people within their populations. This would be why the right to die movement has had such an urgency to be implemented in socialized democracies. A previous poster confirmed this interpretation.