I thought so too until I read about what he actually has. There is no treatment. He was going to be used as a lab rat in an experiment, of which the doctor doing the experimentation himself stated that it was very unlikely to improve his condition. His parents, in their desperation, agreed, and who can blame them? In some countries, however (England among them), children are considered to have their own human rights apart from what their parents deign to grant them. That is what this case is about, and the focus in the U.S. is, naturally, U.S.-centric. We look at it in the realm of health insurance, which to our citizens is a more pressing issue than the concept of children possessing intrinsic civil rights. Most people in the U.S. look at children as a form of property with limited rights, and that should cause a lot more outrage among us than who we pay insurance to.Kazmyr wrote:It's fucking infuriating.Okeefenokee wrote:
The family raised the money. The government blocked them from seeking treatment or leaving the country. Future subjects of the caliphate cheer loudly.
So, the real issues are:
1) How much in the way of intrinsic human rights are children entitled to?
2) Where do we draw the line on what parents may consent to on behalf of their children?
3) Is human experimentation ethical when it's being performed for knowledge and won't help the patient? Is it ever ethical to experiment on a child?