A few weeks into sixth grade, Colman Chadam had to leave school because of his DNA.
The situation, odd as it may sound, played out like this. Colman has genetic markers for cystic fibrosis, and kids with the inherited lung disease can't be near each other because they're vulnerable to contagious infections. Two siblings with cystic fibrosis also attended Colman's middle school in Palo Alto, California in 2012. So Colman was out, even though he didn't actually have the disease, according to a lawsuit that his parents filed against the school district. The allegation? Genetic discrimination.
Yes, genetic discrimination. Get used to those two words together, because they're likely to become a lot more common. With DNA tests now cheap and readily available, the number of people getting tests has gone way up—along with the potential for discrimination based on the results. When Colman's school tried to transfer him based on his genetic status, the lawsuit alleges, the district violated the Americans With Disabilities Act and Colman's First Amendment right to privacy. "This is the test case," says the Chadam's lawyer, Stephen Jaffe.
(Score: 2) by kurenai.tsubasa on Thursday February 04 2016, @01:53AM
In the spirit of AC's reply, I'd also like to confirm that there is no diagram or PowerPoint presentation which accurately captures GP's post that anybody at any decision making level importance will understand. It's a complicated point that AC makes illustrating multiple fallacies.
I found the length of GP's post to be adequate: terse and to the point, illustrating the complete logical failure happening here, presuming the facts have been presented in good faith.
(Score: 2) by JoeMerchant on Thursday February 04 2016, @03:19AM
Posting from bizarro world.
I completely agree.
Україна досі не є частиною Росії Слава Україні🌻 https://news.stanford.edu/2023/02/17/will-russia-ukraine-war-end