Dude, no. Some women flat out cannot conceive or carry to term and surrogacy might be their sole chance to do what we're meant to do and reproduce.
Now while there is the argument relating to the why of their inability to conceive, it's not a simple case of "bad breeder" that would mean whatever genetic offspring they produce would be a mule [in the sterile sense of the word] and/or worse depending on other genetic factors.
Now while there is the argument relating to the why of their inability to conceive, it's not a simple case of "bad breeder"
Policy can't account for every single person's particulars. On balance, it's better that those that cannot reproduce don't. You mess with that, I think, at your peril.
Dude, no. Some women flat out cannot conceive or carry to term and surrogacy might be their sole chance to do what we're meant to do and reproduce.
For all of history, people did just fine with a small percentage of people who were unable to reproduce for such reasons. Things worked just fine. It may be sad for the people involved, and I agree that "just adopt" is not reasonable advice to people who want their own children.
But it is far more unseemly to allow the abuse of a woman's body, and only by wealthy lowlifes who can afford to spend $200k on it. What's more, such unnatural things sound good when it's the first step, and then quickly transform into nightmarish, dystopian scenarios when you follow the logic to ts conclusion. Things like designer babies.
Dude, no. Some women flat out cannot conceive or carry to term and surrogacy might be their sole chance to do what we're meant to do and reproduce.
Now while there is the argument relating to the why of their inability to conceive, it's not a simple case of "bad breeder" that would mean whatever genetic offspring they produce would be a mule [in the sterile sense of the word] and/or worse depending on other genetic factors.
Policy can't account for every single person's particulars. On balance, it's better that those that cannot reproduce don't. You mess with that, I think, at your peril.
For all of history, people did just fine with a small percentage of people who were unable to reproduce for such reasons. Things worked just fine. It may be sad for the people involved, and I agree that "just adopt" is not reasonable advice to people who want their own children.
But it is far more unseemly to allow the abuse of a woman's body, and only by wealthy lowlifes who can afford to spend $200k on it. What's more, such unnatural things sound good when it's the first step, and then quickly transform into nightmarish, dystopian scenarios when you follow the logic to ts conclusion. Things like designer babies.