Who Will Have Access To The Gene Therapy?: Is It Interfering With God Plan?

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Who will have access to the gene therapy?

- The people who have a privileged can access to the gene therapy because
this therapy is expensive it is worth a million each of treatment, but this is
also great therapy for those people who have a cancer like cystic fibrosis,
heart disease, diabetes, hemophilia, and AIDS, among other diseases.

Is it interfering with God plan?


- In my opinion, Gene therapy interferes with God’s plan for humans by
potentially changing people from the way nature intended to make them. In
the Book of Matthew, it states, “But he answered and said, every plant, which
my heavenly Father hath not planted, shall be rooted up,” (Matthew, 15:13).
God will somehow feel disrespectful to what people did with his creation
even if it is very useful for us people specially to those need it.

Should people be allowed to use gene therapy to enhance basic human traits
such as height, intelligence etc.?
- In my opinion, and surely this is a subject that a lot of people don't know
much about- so it tends to get overlooked, and I don't think that anyone
should be put on the spot to choose yes or no without any knowledge of the
subject. My belief stands firm into the fact that such things are not to be
scientifically altered for the purpose of. It’s one thing if you would die without
this type of therapy— to save lives we go through enormous measures to
cheat death- or at least make the last of our days tolerable or comfortable.
We are individuals, with different talents or gifts. We are supposed to
embrace our talents and realize that we aren’t going to be good at everything
that man puts in front of us! Imagine if they started making us all the same-
like cookie cutter houses or every chain restaurant! It's not meant to be
controlled by man especially!
it alright to use the therapy in the prenatal stage of development in babies.?
The most opportune time to do any gene therapy prenatally is standard testing
for the parents to be sure neither of them carries a mutation that—paired—could
cause a problem for an infant. Gene therapy is also easiest in the embryo stage.
Part of the difficulty in gene therapy is getting the “good” gene into as many cells
as possible. That’s easiest to do when the developing baby is the smallest—as an
embryo. That technique would involve in vitro fertilization, embryo selection, and
implantation in the mother’s uterus.

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