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When I was a freshman in college I thought "Surely nobody would want to inherit genetic diseases, and why wouldn't we want to to try and make people just naturally live longer, healthier lives?" but then I did even the tiniest bit of research on how eugenics actually worked and I completely abandoned that line of thinking.
I should also point out that not all "diseases" (or what is typically considered one) are actually bad.
Like, autism is typically considered a grave disease that severely impacts people's lifes very negatively ... or so goes the story told by mainstream media.
in my personal experience, autistic people have both been the most charming, funny, and nice people i've ever met. might be because i vibe so well with them because i have severe autism myself, and i can see a lot of value in it that is commonly overlooked by society. i think it's outright important for society that it exists. still, society sees it as a "disease".
That's certainly one of the points that I needed to learn about. There are certainly genetic diseases like congenital heart defects or hemophilia. But then there are genetic differences that might seem maladaptive under certain given circumstances, but wouldn't be any issue at all or might even confer advantages under different societal contexts. And then there are the straightforward differences that eugenics-obsessed regimes like to define as undesirable, like having the wrong hair, eye, or skin color, and then use that as an excuse to persecute whomever they want to. The whole thing is irreparably fucked.