Closed. The boat sank, the sharks won.

October 6, 2008

Evolutionary harm.

Filed under: Ponderings

This is the 21st Century and we can treat so many previously untreatable medical conditions. It’s wonderful isn’t it?

Isn’t it?

In a way, yes, it’s fabulous that people I know aren’t dead thanks to medical intervention, that I’m not dead thanks to modern medical intervention.  But in some ways I’ve been thinking that the long term effects are unknown and so potentially dangerous.

Think about what we’re doing for a moment. Take theoretical woman A - she has a narrow pelvis and is pregnant. The baby is breech and there are complications. So the hospital performs an emergency caesarian and both Mum and baby are fine. But only a short time ago she would have likely died in childbirth and the baby would have died too. Tragic, but evolution in action really. So baby is a girl and has inherited mum’s narrow pelvis so when she comes to have children she could well have the same problems and the pattern repeats, and worsens because we have selected that narrow pelvis as a positive trait to be perpetuated and enhanced.

Take theoretical child B - who has a chronic illness and is essentially kept alive through a serious drug regime. This child lives a reasonably normal life, just has to have injections at regular intervals.  Again, just a short time ago that child would have died, or at least not produced children with the same condition.With IVF and fertility treatments we are producing children who should never have been born and we are undoing natural population controls as we smother the planet with our sheer numbers. We tear the planet apart and take what we think we need with no regard for the ecosystem on a local or global level.

Take this a few generations down the line and we are coping with a sick population with high levels of diabetes, of epilepsy, of heart disease, of hormonal imbalances, of growth problems, of such a huge range of disorders that our medical technology has to work harder and go further to cope and that just perpetuates the problem. How far are we prepared to go? What are we prepared to destroy in order to achieve this artificial longevity and sustained poor health?

We are supporting a weakened Human Species. We are affecting evolution and it’s not in a good way. And that’s just the damage we’re doing to ourselves. We are doing so much harm on a global level it’s unbelievable.

So, what happens when the oil runs out? When the drugs can’t be made and there’s no general anaesthetic for major operations, no internet. When the fuel is all gone and there is no plastic apart from that lying in landfill. Some predictions say within 4 years, some say 10, but it’s coming and it’ll happen sooner than you think.

Get free blog up and running in minutes with Blogsome
Theme designed by Jay of onefinejay.com