Convince people to stop giving birth? Not asking for a whole lot? Okay. Flip the table.Is a Christain asking you to put your faith in God asking for a whole lot? I'd wager to you it would be.
And 100%? Yeah, we would. Because if you don't have 100% concensus there's holdouts. There's opposition. There's active resistance. For example.
Quote from: on August 21, 2015, 03:28:52 PMConvince people to stop giving birth? Not asking for a whole lot? Okay. Flip the table.Is a Christain asking you to put your faith in God asking for a whole lot? I'd wager to you it would be. only because there is no god, so I meanthat's not a great comparisonQuoteAnd 100%? Yeah, we would. Because if you don't have 100% concensus there's holdouts. There's opposition. There's active resistance. For example.there are already laws in china that say you can't have more than, like, two kidsand i'm sure there's people who disagree with that law, but generally speaking, most people abide by it
I would like to point out that I never argued against improving current drugs or implied that you should be happy with what we currently have available; all I said is that there is no such thing as a perfect drug. Ibuprofen, a drug which hundreds of thousands of people use ever day, has possible side-effects that involve headache, nausea, bleeding, vomiting, et cetera. Until I just googled it, I had no idea that taking an Advil could give you a headache, or make you bleed. That's how rare that side-effect is.If all drugs had side-effects that occured at that same likeliness, it would be fantastic. And if those side-effects weren't even a thing? Even better. But that's not what's currently happening, and I accept that. I don't think it should stay that way, gOD no, but am I not allowed to speak in terms of the present? In the future, I'd love to see hereditary conditions phased out by advanced genetic screening during before a child is born; I'd love to see someone who has lost their legs have new legs, whether they be artificial tissue and muscle or cybernetic, and even more amazingly a total upgrade from normal legs; I'd love to see surgeries and drugs that assist in living a healthier and/or more "pure" life. But that's what I want, not what I have.That's not saying that it isn't important to work for the change we want to see. I just don't think saying, "I'm not happy with the current state" means much. I don't think anybody who doesn't profit from it is happy with the state of the medical industry. It just strikes me as either redundant or an absurdly overemotional response to the situation, and Verb generally isn't the kind of person to speak redundantly. That was my issue with your argument.
I think with diligent testing, we could mitigate the side-effects to a point where they are either negligible, extremely rare, or harmless.
Quote from: Verbatim on August 22, 2015, 09:36:11 PMI think with diligent testing, we could mitigate the side-effects to a point where they are either negligible, extremely rare, or harmless.That was essentially my point. There will always be side-effects; all you can do is make them as maleficial and infrequent as possible.