Maybe people aren’t reacting because blockbuster science fiction movies over the last 30 years have created a pseudo-morality around the idea of synthetic people.
Films often feature human clones as heroes who must overcome prejudice against their origins, or robots that are struggling to get their rights as living beings recognized, or humans uploading their consciousness into new bodies.
These themes teach people that it is moral to treat clones, artificial intelligence, and synthetic people as actual human beings. In many movies, humans are the villains for trying to repress these new life forms. Think Blade Runner, Cloud Atlas, and so on.
But getting brainwashed by Hollywood and numbed by political debates shouldn’t leave us sleepwalking into a world of genetically-altered and synthetic people.
While researchers may say they are creating synthetic embryos for greater good—to treat diseases—their “products” will inevitably require corporate investment and financial returns. It’s worth remembering that the research into genetically modifying plants was supposed to deliver healthier food but mainly gave us Roundup Ready crops modified to withstand more glyphosate—a profitable poison that affects both people and plants.
You can expect that genetically modifying research animals for certain traits, including behaviors, is helpful for researchers—and the bottom line of the entities selling those “products.” Researchers are already splicing pigs with human DNA to create viable transplant organs, which could save lives. But it’s worth asking why we are creating embryos and organs while doing little about the lifestyle factors that lead to disease and organ failure in the first place.
Americans are dying from terrible food, sitting around, stress, and loneliness and getting “cured” with increasingly expensive and technologically advanced drugs, devices, gene therapies, and biologics.
While some researchers may have good intentions, investors want living organisms, cell lines, embryos, genetic traits, and biotech capabilities they can patent, own, and sell. What will it mean to the very nature of humanity if we give them a free hand with the human genome?