Wow, I agree, it's almost as if I never said that.Broomstick wrote: A parent's right to make decisions on behalf of their children is not unlimited.
And yet, parents are put in the position from time to time to make medical decisions regarding the well being of their kids. Sometimes the doctors even present the options to the parents to let them make the decision! Boy wouldn't that create a quandary.My Other Half nearly lost his right leg because of one too many surgeries to fix his neurological problem - in his case, the problem being at the lower end of the spine rather than in the skull. He also suffers side effects from another surgery that was not in his best interests. Just because a cure exists does not mean a parent can or should make the decision for a child. I would hope that, if there are significant side effects, at least the initial children subjected to it will have their cases reviewed by an impartial ethics panel.
Nitram's perfectly understandable argument is that people who are afflicted by this condition such as himself do not want to become a completely changed person by any cure and I believe he has every right to make that decision for himself.
However, my inquiries were based on the facts that kids are already changing as people as they grow, children do not have the lifetimes of experiences that would cause them to look back on their memories as "alien", and that parents of autistic children who are put in the position of having to make this decision are going to be weighing the side effects versus a chance to legitimately improve their child's future prospects in life. I wanted to ask him how he would respond in that particular situation, and I feel he has answered my questions honestly and fairly openly, I thank him for that. Didn't need your completely irrelevant two cents for any of that now did I.