An OP that touches on eugenics and the latest
SFIA episode bring me to this question. Eugenics has kind of a bad reputation today, not in small part through who supported it in the day and how it was planned to be implemented.
But is it really that unethical to want a healthy population? When genetics was discovered, the thought was to simply stop people with "bad genes" from reproducing, but today we have the option to edit our genes. We can "bioform" our offspring to be adapted optimally to life in a future ecology. We could eliminate illnesses and vulnerabilities, e.g. to obesity, with just a bit
CRISPR/Cas9. (Not by "training", sorry.)
Shouldn't we?