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IEET > Rights > ReproRights > Directors > George Dvorsky

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Canadian couples discover sex selection loophole


George Dvorsky
George Dvorsky
Sentient Developments

Posted: Jun 24, 2007

It’s funny how we pick our battles. While I try to focus on some of the more important social issues facing Canadians, there are some minor annoyances that will get a rise out of me every time.

One of these ‘annoyances’ is the struggle for parents to earn the right to select the gender of their offspring. Sex selection is currently illegal in Canada. Both parents and complicit doctors face hefty fines and potential jail terms should they break the law. I’ve argued on many previous occasions why I think parents deserve this right, so I’ll spare you the drill.

But now it appears that Canadian couples have discovered a loophole (aside from trips to the United States where it’s sanctioned).

Mail-order kits

I read with some interest recently of how some Canadian couples are using a mail-order kit to determine the sex of a fetus early in pregnancy for the purpose of selective abortion. A relatively inexpensive blood test can analyze fetal DNA for the presence of the male Y chromosome, allowing the gender to be determined as early as five weeks into a pregnancy. The manufacturer, a British company called DNA Worldwide, claims an accuracy rate around 95% (which is amazingly high).

They ship on average 2 kits to Canada per week and have no way of determining how couples use the information revealed by the test.

Ethical issues

This prompted the Society of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists to decry the use of early gender tests for ‘selective abortion.’

“The SOGC remains firmly against the practice of sex selection through selective abortion,” Dr. Don Davis, the group’s president, said in a release. “These new technologies are finding their way to Canadian women and are opening the door to a number of ethical questions.”

The group sees the procedure as being discriminatory.

Spurious claims

The SOGC’s position raises the question: discriminatory against whom? In Canada, where abortions are legal, the issue of non-personhood during early gestation seems have been settled. Surely the SOGC is not suggesting that a 5 week old fetus can be discriminated against.

I realize that the argument against gender selection transcends the womb as a potential social issue. There is fear that Canadians will use selection technologies to favour one gender over the other, much like what is happening in China and India.

Of course, we don’t live in China or India, nor have we retained outmoded perspectives on gender. Just as importantly, and while not yet perfect, the potential socioeconomic disadvantages of gender have been greatly reduced in the West. There is no good reason to significantly favour one gender over the other in Canada.

Without a doubt, Canadian couples would use sex selection as a means to ensure family balancing—which in today’s two-kids-per-couple Canada translates to—*aghast*—an equal distribution of one girl and one boy.

Going against demand

Arguments against sex selection don’t hold up against deeper scrutiny. Charges of discrimination and fears of societal collapse as a result of a skewed gender ratio are hallucinatory. This is a law that most certainly needs to be reconsidered.

Moreover, Canadian couples are quite clearly showing a demand for sex selection. Even though no statistics or evidence were provided, the SOGC was clearly alerted by something—otherwise, why the public statement?

I know from personal experience that Canadians want this. Every time I pen an article about sex selection my inbox fills up with sympathetic and supportive e-mails. Many of the letters bemoan the paternalistic nature of the law—it’s as if Canadians can’t be trusted with their own reproductive choices.

In this case, where no harm is being done, and where Canadians have clearly indicated demand, it’s high time that this law be repealed.


George Dvorsky serves as Chair of the IEET Board of Directors and also heads our Rights of Non-Human Persons program. George produces Sentient Developments blog and podcast.
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COMMENTS


Just read the article and was amazed. I am reading about the gender selection and would like to know but don't know where to start, can you point me in the right direction.



That's just horrible. This is the first time I hear about the selective abortion practices and I am appalled by people who are actually willing to go through a couple of abortions just so they can have the right sex of the baby.

I have nothing against giving people the right to choose a sex of their child, but surely this is not a way to do it.

Michael Webb



Indiscriminate abortion: OK
Selective abortion: Horrible.

I gotta admit, something about this combination of beliefs doesn't sit well with me.

(Computer problems may have led this post to be posted twice.)



I am personally pro-life, but can't see what rational basis a pro-abortionist could give for prohibiting gender selective abortion. If a pro-abortionist (under the title "pro-choice") would argue that women should have the right to choose to kill a fetus for any reason, why not this reason? And if the pro-abortionist is tolerantly multi-cultural, how could she condemn the cultural assumptions of those who find girls an economic disadvantage? Is there a difference between those who make that choice and the single woman here who says she can't afford to keep her baby. An economic decision is an economic decision--if a boy makes you money, you keep him (assuming that financial hardship is a legitimate basis for abortion). Isn't it ironic that some feminists have considered abortion choice to be one of the essential platforms of their cause, and suddenly they see the platform turned back against them? Tragically, hoist with your own petard. Me, I think the abortion of a viable fetus is an act against personhood. . . and that persons are not mail order commodities. Dr. Seuss's Horton had it right: "A person's a person, no matter how small."



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