I *am* making a good faith effort at arguing my point. It's not my fault that everyone else is twisting words around and using hyper-specific definitions of things!
This is typically a pretty good indication that you have a misunderstanding of something basic.
Eugenics, for instance, can be a "treatment" for a condition rather than a "cure", and simply aim to reduce the incidence of a condition, but whenever I explain that, they just ignore me and keep on going, or give some bullshit explanation involving something completely unrelated that totally ignores my actual point!
It can aim to reduce the incidence of a condition, yes, but eugenics programs -- by definition -- aim to do so in a sustainable and hereditary fashion. That is
what eugenics is about. You can't just redefine the term in the middle of a discussion about the practicality of eugenics programs -- it's both moving goalpoasts and arguing in bad faith.
This is Fredrick Brennan, aka "Hotwheels". He has Osteogenesis Imperfecta, and he's the author of the article I linked.
To be more specific, he has either Type III or Type IV osteogenesis imperfecta by his own description in an
interview he gave to Ars Technica a few years ago. You have been citing numbers for Type I OI. You continue to do so throughout your post.
See? That's what arguing in bad faith looks like... and it's not the only example of you playing fast and loose that way that I can cite.
The people saying that they don't reproduce? They do, and can - his mother did, and she had two boys, both of whom had her condition. A woman, who looked like that, had two children, because their father was so desperate for sex that he didn't *care* what the woman he was having sex with looked like as long as she was willing.
An assertion allegedly made by an abandoned and abused son in an article posted to a neo-Nazi news site is hardly reliable evidence of the father's motives.
More to the point, you finding a single example means jack shit on the scales social programs work on. As if that wasn't enough, your numbers then assume that
every person with that sort of OI goes on to have exactly one child with a person who doesn't have OI.
In fact, the whole "nothing in his story is relevant" bit was the
very first thing I pointed out when you brought his story up.
Even if there's other versions of the disease out there that are less severe? They're not the ones I'm talking about.
My very first post mentioning OI brought up the various types and the differences in how often they're caused by de novo mutations. I then used
Type I -- the
mildest type which fits an autosomal dominant heritability pattern -- as my illustration of why an eugenics program would do jack and shit to meaningfully deal with it.
I'm talking about the ones like Hotwheels here, who are at an immediate glance obviously crippled for life as a result of a genetically dominant disorder, who will require carers to look after them for life, and who will pass the disorder on to 50% of their children (who make up 40% of the total population of the people suffering from their disease, apparently).
Aaaand see? First off, Hotwheels
pays his carer. The fact that he does so -- and is
able to do so -- illustrates a pretty strong argument against the usual excuses for eugenic "solutions".
Secondly, he's stated, in an
interview for Ars Technica, that he has either Type III or (very severe) IV OI. The numbers I gave -- and that you're quoting -- are for Type I. (Type IV, I've learned while researching the condition during this exchange, is
weird.)
This is important: You can't mix and match things that way, as I've repeatedly noted. Even
within types, severity varies considerably; what you're portraying isn't OI -- it's a
stereotype of OI... and yes, it has a basis in fact. So do
most stereotypes. What you're doing is akin, ontologically speaking, to pointing to a single black gangster from a troubled family and claiming that blacks -- in general -- are criminals from troubled families.
Thirdly, the number needed to treat you cite in favor of your idea-- a 5:2 ratio -- not only assume those incorrect numbers, but further assume that each and every person with severe OI will have one -- and only one -- child with an unaffected individual. This is patently false. Then they also assume that you will "get" an unbiased sample of people with the condition. This is
also patently false, as I've repeatedly noted.
Oh, and they assume a 20% infant mortality rate. Again, false.
You also calculated in a way that's hardly robust to violations of said assumptions, all of which were made to get as favorable numbers as possible for your program. Again, this is stunningly unlikely.
You have done nothing to correct these probelms, despite them being repeatedly pointed out to you. Do you start to see why we're finding your argument in bad faith?
Now, I've been tolerating this and addressing it directly here for the very simple reason that eugenics and eugenics programs are a major, ongoing issue in autism. Sterilization -- including
involuntary sterilization -- of various types occurs regularly, and one of my first notable advocacy cases in the field involved trying to expose a national network of clinics dedicated to chemically castrating autistic children.
Other methods used include trying to prevent autistic people from marrying or having the legal ability to give consent, deliberately isolating people on the spectrum from the opposite gender, sabotaging the social skills relevant to dating, marrying, and having sex...
All of these, of course, are
less plausible than your hypothetical program. They are still (well, except the castration clinics -- those were just weird) motivated by eugenic thinking. Eugenics --
genuine eugenics -- is a huge and ongoing problem.
And, as noted, it
doesn't work.