Simply why? Why would you do this to someone? I don't want my boy to look in my eyes after 20 years and tell me "Why dad? Why?" and point to his receding temples.
My parents are regretting giving birth to me (I made them regret) and I would feel **** if someone did the same to me.
Leave having children to those of great genetics (models, actors, etc..). The world is overpopulated already. You don't want to add another suicidal, unhappy and genetically inferior being to this already full world.
Your second line is painful. 'My parents are regretting giving birth to me'. It's really, really, REALLY sad that you have put the burden of this on your parents to the point where they feel personally responsible for your pain, caused by a genetic DICE ROLL.
Infact, this is one of the most outrageous posts I've seen in my FORUM VIEWING HISTORY (since I was like 9?). Let me address why.
1) You ask why? Why are balding men having children? Yet, my father gave me the greatest gift of all, LIFE, regalrdess of whether my frickin' hair is receeding or what not. Infact, let me give you a rundown of the genetic disadvantages I had to face life with;
I had a lazy eye up until I physically learnt to control both my eyes at about the age of 16-17 (when I'm tired I can't do this).
I started balding at 17-18!
I am naturally skinny (though 6ft 1.5 tall) and it took me ages and ages of gym and food to reach a reasonable weight (about 11 and a half stone - when people finally stopped abusing me for being skinny and weak) and even recently I've lost alot of that.
And even then, I am sooooo lucky compared to the myriad of diseases and conditions that others are born with! All those things shape your 'soul', the little innocent being that stepped into this world as a baby, and provide you with the chance to build your strength of character and become a wise and 'strong man'. Yeah, growing up was hard being different to the other kids and worse so in my early teenage years but true character and personality will always shine and I've had the pleasures of experiencing true friendship, true love, true laughter, true joy and true happiness. Yet, you are legitly arguing that all of this should be denied from a being by his parents incase that being is too weak to handle the circumstances possibly given to him?
And yes, weak may sound harsh, but seriously I understand as well as you how painful balding originally is, however honestly it is one of the smaller issues of my life in hindsight and I want you to realise the same. You're being WEAK. Stop it. Now. Literally. Read this sentence, and accept you're being weak, and accept you're life is worth more than viewing yourself as an unlucky sod, and work to make it better. DO IT. Go gym, read, go on a good food diet, raise your body and consciousness in other ways rather than bending it to your balding issue. Please, otherwise you will never find happiness in this dark world if you have already stumbled so hard.
2) I'm not going to say whats wrong with saying you made your parents regret giving birth to you, but I will say apologize to your parents. What they gave you is priceless, the work they put in to love, feed and care for you throughout your whole life has been thrown back into their face in the harshest of ways. Their HUMAN love is more important than their unconscious genes could ever be, if you fail to see this then I fear our society has dampened your 'soul' to a low level, and that hurts me
3) Your last line is completely wrong, and infact a direct consequence of the bull**** Darwinism choked down our throats since early days in school (don't get me wrong, I believe in evolution, but it has provided un-ample reasons for 'life' and driven our hearts down the wrong route - and NO, I'm not 'religious'). What is great genetics is technically subjective (besides obviously no one wishing their child to have serious diseases or conditions), and although society has always attempted to provide an objective set of desired genes (beauty, strength, intelligence) it is important to realise that none of these traits can exist without their counter-part (non-beauty/'ugliness', weakness and lack of intelligence). If you can't appreciate this duality in life, you will find it very hard to find any happiness whenever you feel the dice has rolled against your favour. Every person has a place on this planet, in every possible flavour, and the only thing preventing you from happiness is yourself, not your genetics.
When I used to walk to university I would sometimes see this guy and he had a strange disease, a severe form of dwarfism, where he must of been about 2 foot tall maximum, it literally took him 5 steps to cover one of mine, and everytime I saw him my heart broke into a thousand pieces inside, just imagining the amount of abuse he has probably received, the amount of desire he has to be like others, the amount of sad nights he has had, YET he always looked happy, always carried a smile, always came to university and worked hard and had a great set of friends in the end. This guys soul has risen above his genetic dice roll and found a happiness that yet you seem to make sound so elusive with just the simple issue of balding.
I really hope any of the replies in this thread can get you to see otherwise.
- - - Updated - - -
Also, after reading this mini side debate about eugenics and value of life, my 2 cents:
I agree with Thom. Eugenics can't be justified in my opinion. Infact, one of the better things about Darwinism is that (like unfettered Capitalism) when left to run of it's own accord should filter out the bad and reach it's own balancing state. In practice this doesn't really happen, but a common trend is the increase of intelligence generation to generation, and even more kids these days are finding 'intelligence' in a range of talents that their parents would of never had (thanks to the internet!). Now, for us as humans to suddenly intervene in this process based on a eugenics program would be STATING AN OBJECTIVE VALUE OF LIFE on others based off a SUBJECTIVE OPINION; that is to say, whoever runs this program will state (with 100% confidence) that the value of this person A's life relative to humanity is worth more than person B's life relative to humanity, and this is WRONG, WRONG, WRONG!! To imagine, in a universe so beautiful and grand, where every action and form is inexplicitly linked, where every bad gave rise to good and every good gave rise to bad, we as humans want to suddenly decide what is allowed to continue existing in this universe and what isn't?! I'm sorry but to me this is just wrong. If you look at it otherwise, you are looking at it from a robotic, efficient and non-humane way in my opinion, and this is why darkness can so easily enter such a concept.
On another note, like Thom also I believe there is something more to us as humans. Something almost divine, to believe in the midst of the first subatomic particles undergoing emotionless combinations to form the first elements, which formed the first stars, which formed the first carbon, and planets, which then formed atmospheres in which the first simple 'life' arised, until finally you have humans, beings that are self-aware, that have the capacity for emotion and infinite love, that can decode and understand the universe around them. We are something special truely, and it is very easy to forget this miracle and become concerned with the hard, physical matter issues of everyday life.