this post was submitted on 15 Sep 2023
867 points (96.3% liked)
Europe
8484 readers
1 users here now
News/Interesting Stories/Beautiful Pictures from Europe 🇪🇺
(Current banner: Thunder mountain, Germany, 🇩🇪 ) Feel free to post submissions for banner pictures
Rules
(This list is obviously incomplete, but it will get expanded when necessary)
- Be nice to each other (e.g. No direct insults against each other);
- No racism, antisemitism, dehumanisation of minorities or glorification of National Socialism allowed;
- No posts linking to mis-information funded by foreign states or billionaires.
Also check out !yurop@lemm.ee
founded 2 years ago
MODERATORS
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
view the rest of the comments
Sweden already started their eugenics program when they officially decided to murder elderly COVID patients instead of treating them.
Murdering the elderly seems like an ineffective way to start a eugenics program.
Killing off people elderly people could potentially lead to eugenic effects downstream. Not everything is simple and easy to understand as you want it to be.
Funny comment for somebody with the nick 'KillAllPoorPeople', but wrong in my eyes, nonetheless. Eugenic is preselection of who gets born by either prenatal measurements or hindering those who are able to reproduce. Killing off people who will have no chance to reproduce anyways is from an eugenic point of view insignificant. There is no longterm downstream effect, only the possibility of some moral change.
"I cannot personally think of a scenario where something is true, therefore, it can not and can never be true." - every great philosopher and scientist
'I have an opinion and make either the evidence, my perception of it or the terms we are discussing fitting it'
- every troll always
There is no way to see senicide as a eugenic strategy without changing what eugenic means. But, as you point out, I might be wrong. So feel free to score your goal without moving the post.
"People in my family live long, but if we live long we will be executed, I don't think we should have children."
See how easy that was to come up with one obvious example?
That is not eugenics, because the people are not removed from the genepool as a result of eugenic thought, but by people with non-eugenic intentions under the influence of a specific policy that is not inherently eugenic. I see that as a circular argument. They can chose to reproduce. Also note, that this policy would not improve the genepool, but dramatically weaken it, as it would lead to - if somehow a significant amount of people would share your non-sequitur train of thought - only those reproducing who can be sure that their offspring dies early, e.g. families who have certainty that there offspring dies at 50 of cancer. Prenatal diagnostics would turned into the opposite it is used for, where only defective children would be born. You make a case for the opposite of eugenics.
"Eugenics is a set of beliefs and practices that aim to improve the genetic quality of a human population." https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eugenics
"Eugenics is the practice or advocacy of improving the human species by selectively mating people with specific desirable hereditary traits." https://www.history.com/topics/european-history/eugenics
"eugenics, the selection of desired heritable characteristics in order to improve future generations, typically in reference to humans." https://www.britannica.com/science/eugenics-genetics
Your personal idea of "improving" and "weakening" isn't how the definition of the word is defined (they don't list your name to give the approval). Eugenics, in practice, never applied to people with wealth and power. Other people not being allowed to grow old and "leech" off society (i.e. not give their capital and labor to the ruling class) is an idea in a lot of mainstream conservative circles today. To think a policy of killing off the elderly when they "run out" of societal value during a global pandemic isn't running up to the line of eugenics is, frankly, kind of absurd. Policies can be much more subtle and not trigger people to think it's eugenics (e.g. "color blind" policies that purposely target racial minorities) and usually fight against the idea they're eugenics (e.g. or racist). You're being too gatekeepy and not accepting that eugenics doesn't need to come in the form of the utmost obvious like rounding up every distinct minority and killing them off so they can't repopulate with their kind.
This is the key point and you are simply wrong, as you confuse eugenics and utilitarism. It is not absurd to think of the covid example as eugenic, but it does not withstand a closer look, because, as you point out yourself, it's about the economic value, not the genetic value.
The reason people are eugenicists is because of some other thing. The "genetic value" doesn't exist on its own. It exists part of society. Race eugenicists, for example, think their race is superior to others because of x, y, and z (one of the reasons is almost always about "economic value" too).
Exactly. The intention of eugenics is about the genetic value. If improving economic situation of the majority is the reason for a policy, its utilitarian. A eugenetic policy is always utilitarian under the assumptions of the specific eugenists implementing it. But by overwhelming far majority is not every utilitarian policy a eugenic one. You so far, only prestend utilitarian ideas and not a single instance, where improving the genetic value is the actual intention. A utilitarian policy aiming at economic value and by accident also somehow influencing reproduction behaviour is not eugenic.
But is it how you'd start a "eugenics program"? I'm also not sure quite what you mean. Lead to it politically, or through some social knock on effect or?
Can you illustrate how, in an example? You seem to be decisive this is true, but it isn't obvious to me and I didn't see an explanation yet.
If possible, try to link your explanation to concepts used in https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eugenics, so that we don't talk past each other.
From my possibly still uneducated point of view, what happens to elderly people (who don't procreate) can not alter the gene pool.
Ah wow, when did this occur? It seem implausible that a nation would refuse to treat a patient unless hospitals were at some sort of max capacity, how many people died in this manner? What is the inflection age where the death trend for that age group spikes? I would expect it to be visible and measurable. Did any other countries practice such a program?
Also you said it was an official declaration, what date did this announcement occur? It might help to reduce the questions I ask if I can look it up and link it.
Article based on this paper.
Sweden took a sociopath-based approach no matter which way you look at it.
That is really incredible. This quote stood out to me, as it seems to be the root cause of many pandemic woes, "We argue that that scientific methodology was not followed by the major figures in the acting authorities—or the responsible politicians—with alternative narratives being considered as valid, resulting in arbitrary policy decisions. In 2014, the Public Health Agency, after 5 years of rearrangement, merged with the Institute for Infectious Disease Control, with six professors leaving between 2010 and 2012 going to the Karolinska Institute. With this setup, the authority lost scientific expertise. The Swedish pandemic strategy seemed targeted towards “natural” herd-immunity and avoiding a societal shutdown. The Public Health Agency labelled advice from national scientists and international authorities as extreme positions, resulting in media and political bodies to accept their own policy instead."
https://twitter.com/LazarusLong13/status/1507978371279454209
That is surprising, but good to know. Though I'm not sure who LazarusLong13 is.
Good lord, take your meds.
Next!
https://twitter.com/LazarusLong13/status/1507978371279454209
Go fuck yourself
lmao, you're clearly unhinged. Go outside.