Richard Dawkins argument against women having babies with Downs Syndrome is nothing more than eugenics – The Independent

Posted: May 20, 2021 at 5:00 am

Richard Dawkins, renowned biologist and emeritus professor at the University of Oxford, has stated that it is immoral to bring a child with Downs Syndrome into the world.

What is actually immoral, though, is to look at a world not built for disabled people including those with Downs and agree that they are the problem, rather than the inherent inaccessibility and ableism that runs rampant in our society.

While speaking to RTE presenter Brendan OConnor recently, Dawkins was challenged about an exchange he had in 2014, where he told a Twitter user who mentioned the ethical dilemma of having a baby with Downs Syndrome, that they should: Abort it and try again. It would be immoral to bring it into the world if you have the choice.

Although Dawkins admitted that he had put his view a bit too strongly, he doubled down by saying: It seems to me to be plausible that you probably would increase the amount of happiness in the world more by having another child instead [of one with a disability.

What Dawkins argued whilst also stating that he has never met a person with Downs Syndrome is that people with trisomy 21 (another name for Downs Syndrome) are a drain on the world, offer nothing and are not functioning members of society. I turn to my brother at this point.

Luke, who is now 23, takes his role as big brother very seriously. He is concerned if Im ever ill, and wanted to make sure I was drinking a lot of water after I had my dose of the Pfizer vaccine. He is also very proud whenever I write an article, and reads them all very seriously. Hes offered to be my agent, so I have that box ticked. Luke also has Downs Syndrome.

This doesnt mean he isnt strong or wonderful. In fact, when I called to check in on how he was doing after he had his vaccine, he simply told me he was strong and brave and thus doing fine, and I had nothing to worry about.

He also prior to the pandemic has a job as a catering assistant at a big school in London, with garlic bread duty being his favourite role. Luke is everything that is right about a human being, including his extra chromosome. I cant be too nice though, because I am still his little sister and sibling rivalry will always exist beyond and above health conditions. In short, Luke and everyone else Ive ever met with Downs is a representation of why Dawkins argument is so wrong.

The people we should be fighting against are the people who argue that those with disabilities are less than or are a drain, a burden or a mistake. Ensuring that his argument involved well-rounded offence, Richard Dawkins also said that women who brought children with Downs Syndrome into the world were immoral.

Bethany and her brother Luke

(Bethany Dawson)

Women can choose what to do with their pregnancies. My parents didnt know that my brother had Downs before he was born, but they knew there was a 25 per cent chance that I had it (based upon prenatal testing when I was in-utero, also known as the last time I got a good nights sleep). My mother did what she wanted to with her pregnancies, and made a choice based on the resources available to her and her personal opinions. A parents choice is their own to make. Its not anyone elses decision.

The so-called argument against the existence of people with Downs Syndrome (I say so-called, because, in reality, its just eugenics) lacks any form of nuance. It doesnt recognise disabled people as individuals. It takes the horrible, inherently ableist view that a person with a disability is less-than, and thus judges them as not worthy of life.

The discourse that Dawkins has employed uses the medical model of disability, wherein physical differences are regarded as the sole disabling factor within a disabled persons existence. In reality, however, the social model of disability wherein ableism and a structural lack of accessibility are viewed as the primary disabling element of existence is more accurate.

Life would be easier if disability was not seen as such a dirty word. As well as being the sibling to a disabled person, I too am disabled with a number of medical conditions that alter my everyday existence. But, because I look healthy, and present in the ways that people deem acceptable (Im independent, have a job, a degree, an active social life etc.), I will never be painted with the same brush as my brother.

Roughly 1 in 1,000 babies born have Downs Syndrome, making it more common than having red hair. Its the most common chromosomal disorder and this is one of the reasons why we must make the world a better place for people with Downs, and fight to show people like Dawkins why they are so wrong.

Disability Downs Syndrome is common, normal and needs to be treated as such.

Luke gave his express consent to have this article written

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Richard Dawkins argument against women having babies with Downs Syndrome is nothing more than eugenics - The Independent

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