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I agree with Dr. Kuhse and Prof. Singer on many points. It is of course ethically defensible to decide sometimes that a seriously handicapped newborn baby may be better off dead, that medicine can do no more to help, and that to stop or not initiate medical treatment may be the best we can do. It is equally true and ethically defensible that these decisions are sometimes based at least in part on predictions about the baby's present and future quality of life. It would be foolish to pretend that quality-of-life considerations should be or can be excluded from these decisions. I argue that the interests and wishes of the family must be given serious consideration, if not that they should be decisive at the expense of the newborn's best interests.
I do, however, seriously object to the claim that some infants with severe disabilities should be killed. I will not repeat the familiar philosophical and other arguments as to why there is arguably, given certain conditions, a significant moral difference between not treating and killing. Instead, my refutation of infanticide will take a more indirect route.