we have to rewire stuff on the biological level. Transhumanism of some kind is logically inevitable and ethically neccessary no matter your objections to it.
Weren't you trying to argue in another thread that merely using sufficiently strong social pressure to change someone's behavior constitutes torture?
Well, some people find execution more humane than prolonged torture! Me, I'd rather, say, be implanted with a chip that makes me want to sodomize cattle than "persuaded" to do the same thing by endless "kind" speeches, guilt-tripping, Dark Arts pontification, etc.
And, hell, if it takes a CEO to decide what "modification kits" to produce, and a scientist to produce them, it might turn out slightly better than any random people with random ideas trying to impress those upon their social lessers and dependents. I'm still afraid of technocratic rule, but ordinary everyday cruelty can be even worse, especially when it's not understood to be cruelty.
From the Harvard Business Review, an article entitled: "Can We Reverse The Stanford Prison Experiment?"
By: Greg McKeown
Posted: June 12, 2012
Clicky Link of Awesome! Wheee! Push me!
Summary:
Royal Canadian Mounted Police attempt a program where they hand out "Positive Tickets"
This idea can be applied to Real Life