First of. Hello
Hi
And going off history nearly every fascist totalitarian regime involved major eugenics operations (mass-slaughter, sterilization + more).
Sterilization of political enemies does not equal eugenics. Name one totalitarian state, other than Nazi Germany that practiced eugenics. There may well be one or two exceptions I'm unaware of, but to say "nearly every... totalitarian regime" is an exaggeration.
Also, eugenics was popular everywhere in the early twentieth century, just like colonialism and other things we now consider absolutely evil. I can name a dozen Western democracies, including Australia and the USA, that practiced forced eugenics. Morality changed post WW2.
Citing moral opposition to any principle using primary evidence based on example of pre-WW2 governance is flawed. Too much has changed since then, the moral framework has completely shifted and you can't cite historical precedent from Pre-ww2 as strong evidence. Things are different. These mistakes will never be repeated.
The biggest change is individualism wasn't the powerful motivating force, Pre-ww2, that it is now. Pre-WW2 it was all about god, king and country. It was completely acceptable to sacrifice individuals for the good of the nation. Now the individual is everything, and that has now become inviolable. The individual is the cult and god of our age. Forced, unnecessary medical procedures for population level benefits will never be acceptable in the West again.
Totalitarianism is dead forever in the West. Freedom won.
Also eugenics would require huge funding, the essence of which only government or government-linked corporations could dedicate.
Individuals will gladly fund designer babies, enhanced offspring, selective breeding etc...
That is correct. But population differences are nearly always based on levels of education. People in the poorest parts of Africa have IQ's of 70 > x because they have never been educated in the way that Western culture has. We base these so called 'significant differences' based on the cultural aspects of a society.
I accept the research is controversial, mixed and unproven, but these respected scientists are claiming their findings show the differences in IQ levels go beyond what would be expected by environmental explanations alone, and a biological difference is a likely explanation.
Arthur Jensen - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
J. Philippe Rushton - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Nobel prize winner and DNA pioneer James Watson is a supporter of this research.
I have no prejudice in this regard, but their research is valid and rigorous and their ideas deserve to be taken seriously.