Pamela Wilson, Special Needs Children Editor of the Bella Online website, which bills itself as the second-largest women's website in the world, offers a link to Down syndrome advocacy on Twitter, and further thoughts on our discussion of whether Down syndrome needs a "cure."
We really don't know what choices we would make if a safe, effective “cure” was developed for the range of intellectual disability found in most individuals with Down syndrome. Looking at the history of 'treatments' for children with Down syndrome concocted in the past quarter of a century would make any parent hesitant to embrace a new version of what 'scientists' call a cure. The thought of giving pharmaceuticals of any kind to newborns, young babies or children is distressing to most parents, especially since those being considered in current research are known to have serious side effects in teens and adults. Previous treatments with supplements considered helpful by sales representatives have not been shown to be effective. It’s likely that any “cure” will have one or two false starts — as one dad mentioned, these are probably the same folks who once thought LSD was a great treatment for people with schizophrenia. Most parents of individuals with Down syndrome do not share a culture of disability with their sons and daughters.
Continued after the jump

Several Globe and Mail reporters who looked looked at the leaked Colvin emails that fueled Christie Blatchford's recent philippics against the diplomat came up with a very different picture. To begin, here's Paul Koring: The Harper government has blacked out large sections of relevant files handed over to the independent inquiry probing allegations of transfer to torture of detainees in Afghanistan, despite the fact that its investigators have the highest levels of national security clearance. The heavily redacted documents...

In a follow-up to her screed against diplomat Richard Colvin, Globe and Mail columnist Christie Blatchford resorts to a full-blown bucket defence. According to Blatchford: There is no evidence Afghan security forces abused prisoners Canada turned over to them: "This is not akin to officials knowing that Afghans were being tortured." Everyone knew Afghan security forces abused prisoners Canada turned over to them: "[It's] obvious that Afghanistan is a brutal country where cruelty, hardship and physical violence are a way of life. No one with a lick of sense would expect that Afghan prisoners would live in comfort or ease." Colvin never actually...