Discussion Sex-Selective IVF: A Tentative Idea About How Things Could Improve For Women...
Discussion Sex-Selective IVF: A Tentative Idea About How Things Could Improve For Women...
Sorry, please delete if this isn't allowed! I've noticed that the other posts in this forum had links, but this is a text post about an idea I've been nurturing after hearing about 4B.
This is something that I've only seen a couple of times in all the years I've been involved with feminism. I think it might be beyond the reaches of liberal feminist imagination, but... Given the progress of reproductive technology in recent decades, do you think that one day, it might be plausible for women to alter the sex ratio of the world in our favor? We could accomplish this with sex-selective IVF (which is illegal in some countries, but not the US), or sex-selective abortion (not my choice due to the hormonal changes that occur just within early pregnancy alone, plus some women's reservations about their own abortions). There is, of course, a lot of talk about artificial wombs, but unlike that, sex-selective IVF has less chance to backfire on women. I think we may be in a window of time to act, before technology increases to the point that men can try to control reproduction by themselves, or the current state of affairs impedes women's choices too much (in the most pessimistic scenario).
As I see it, there may be a variety of factors that could contribute to people choosing IVF for daughters. I think for any movement to work, there should be some sort of external pressure, plus wide appeal. So hopefully that comes with the following points... (It would be nice if we could use incentives like money to discourage having sons and encourage having daughters, but I suppose I'm getting ahead of myself, haha.)
The ethics of this don't bother me at all. If one could somehow magic away the cost/burdens to the mother doing IVF, and one were doing IVF for whatever reason anyway, then yeah, sure why not? However, there are some other cost/burdens that I think you skipped over: if you're doing any kind of embryo screening, you need to expect to be throwing out some number of embryos, and that means (financial costs aside) that you're going to need to harvest proportionately more eggs in order to still have enough to get even one successful implantation. And unfortunately that harvesting process has risks that aren't insignificant and hurts (and is expensive too).
So I don't think that I would get behind recommending sex-selective IVF to everyone. But actually I'm against IVF in general; we have way too many kids in desperate need of foster/adoptive care, so I resent my local government providing subsidies for IVF instead of improving the adoption system.
So I suppose that maybe a compromise might be: if you're going to use public funds to do IVF, it must be sex selective for females only. I could get behind that.
(Apr 26 2025, 2:47 AM)niffin The ethics of this don't bother me at all. If one could somehow magic away the cost/burdens to the mother doing IVF, and one were doing IVF for whatever reason anyway, then yeah, sure why not? However, there are some other cost/burdens that I think you skipped over: if you're doing any kind of embryo screening, you need to expect to be throwing out some number of embryos, and that means (financial costs aside) that you're going to need to harvest proportionately more eggs in order to still have enough to get even one successful implantation. And unfortunately that harvesting process has risks that aren't insignificant and hurts (and is expensive too).
So I don't think that I would get behind recommending sex-selective IVF to everyone. But actually I'm against IVF in general; we have way too many kids in desperate need of foster/adoptive care, so I resent my local government providing subsidies for IVF instead of improving the adoption system.
So I suppose that maybe a compromise might be: if you're going to use public funds to do IVF, it must be sex selective for females only. I could get behind that.
(Apr 26 2025, 2:47 AM)niffin The ethics of this don't bother me at all. If one could somehow magic away the cost/burdens to the mother doing IVF, and one were doing IVF for whatever reason anyway, then yeah, sure why not? However, there are some other cost/burdens that I think you skipped over: if you're doing any kind of embryo screening, you need to expect to be throwing out some number of embryos, and that means (financial costs aside) that you're going to need to harvest proportionately more eggs in order to still have enough to get even one successful implantation. And unfortunately that harvesting process has risks that aren't insignificant and hurts (and is expensive too).
So I don't think that I would get behind recommending sex-selective IVF to everyone. But actually I'm against IVF in general; we have way too many kids in desperate need of foster/adoptive care, so I resent my local government providing subsidies for IVF instead of improving the adoption system.
So I suppose that maybe a compromise might be: if you're going to use public funds to do IVF, it must be sex selective for females only. I could get behind that.
Maybe I'm just hope-posting because we're currently on a newish forum created by a radical feminist programmer, whom I've been told is of a newer generation. (I wish I had gone into programming, but alas...) Who knows where we'll be in a couple of years, if not decades? Especially with women becoming more and more politically aware, and younger women confronting the porn-intensified sexism of their peers? There are so many changes happening in this world right now, and I hope to capitalize on the current environment... Strike while the iron is hot, if you will.
Edit: 10.1016/j.xfss.2021.09.001
I found this November 2021 article where a rhesus macaque blastocyst developed after an egg was fertilized by a round sperm-like cell that the researchers had directly derived from an embryonic stem cell :). That is, there may come a time where we can just induce an XY zygote (or the cells of the resultant embryo) to differentiate into sperm cells, completely skipping the adult male stage... It looks like we're currently crossing the science-fiction to reality threshold on this topic. We might never have to worry about PIV rape again, or have to do things on men's terms... I think that's a pretty awesome possibility to think about.