Sperm Donation: A Viable Option

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The technology of today’s world is astounding. We have learned how to battle diseases that were once thought to lead to a certain death, we have invented incredible technologies that allow us to communicate with people across the world instantly, and maybe most impressively of all, we are able to create human life. We now hold in our hands the technologies that allow those who may not have been able to conceive naturally to have children they can call their own; children who will enrich their lives in a way nothing else can, and who will continue their names and lives after they are gone. In an age where we have more power than ever to use the bodies and DNA of others for our own benefit, it becomes increasingly important that we remain open-minded and fully understand both the disadvantages and advantages equally and create stricter regulations to control how we as a people progress our civilization.
Many people argue against the idea of sperm donation at all, suggesting that due to the number of children likely to be born from each donor’s sperm that it will increase the chance of unknown incest (Mroz). Although this could certainly be a reality as thing stand now, stricter regulation would stop this from becoming an issue. Just as there are laws that federally mandate that parents put their children in school, specifically for their betterment, we should also federally mandate that the use of a sperm donor must be noted on a child’s birth certificate. Just as with the existing regulations regarding schools, a child’s awareness that they were created using a sperm donor should be so overwhelmingly the right choice that it is law. Other beneficial programs could include mandatory counseling for potential sperm recipients to hel...

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...e are now able to have children. Human beings have a deep and basic need to procreate, and if we can help to fulfill this need I believe that we should, we should just make sure we do so with the possible child’s best interest and future in mind as well.

Works Cited

Christian Science Monitor. “In Britain, a decline in sperm donors; Anonymous no longer, most say they want to help infertile couples, not just earn extra cash." Christian Science Monitor 30 Dec. 2005: 07. Opposing Viewpoints In Context. Web. 14 Mar. 2013.
Ellin, Abby. “Making a Child, Minus the Couple.” The New York Times. Nytimes.com. 8 Feb. 2013. Web. 14 Mar. 2013.
"Fatherhood." Radiolab. WNYC. Narr. Jad Abumrad & Robert Krulwich. National Public Radio. 2 Dec. 2008. Radio.
Mroz, Jacqueline. "One Sperm Donor, 150 Offspring." The New York Times. nytimes.com. 5 September 2011. Web. 18 February 2013.

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