Apparently, an adaptation being wildly different from the original isn't always a bad thing.
My previous post made me look up some of my old cartoon favourites, including Quest for Camelot. Which is a crappy movie in so many ways, but as any true fan, I look at what could be rather than at what is
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Uh...okay, I'm stumped. I can't see any possible objection to a reduction in Down's Syndrome cases via genetic screening. It's a debilitating disease that prevents many, if not most, of its victims from achieving self-sufficiency as adults. To be doomed to perpetual childhood is unbelievably cruel. Not to mention, Down's Syndrome is packaged with many physical diseases nobody should have to suffer, and a short life expectancy. I can't see any prospective parent wanting to subject their precious child to those horrors.
In fact, I'd go so far as to say it's morally wrong not to terminate a Down's Syndrome pregnancy (or any other similarly crippling mental disability that tests positive). Providing fifty years (or more!) of decent care for such patients is prohibitively expensive for the vast majority of the world's population. State-run care systems can ( ... )
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I will say that my views on genetic screening have nothing to do with actual living Down Syndrome sufferers. Once a human being is able to survive without heroic measures outside of a womb, they're entitled to life (until the moment they attempt to commit murder, anyway). I'm not advocating that any living person be treated badly. No way ( ... )
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