Wired Magazine never fails to make me think. The October 2009 issue featured “The Smart List: 12 Shocking Ideas That Could Change the World.” There were six ideas that have specific relevance to our field:
- Recruit Autistics. "A preternatural capacity for concentration and near-total recall" makes autistic folks ideal software engineers according to Thorkil Sonne, who founded Specialisterne in Denmark, an IT consultancy that hire mostly people with autism-spectrum disorders.
- Embrace Human Cloning. Human clones walk among us—identical twins—so why not take in vitro fertilization to its logical conclusion?
- Make Health Risk Management Meaningful. According to Ralph Keeney, 55% of deaths for people aged15 to 64 are now due to their own decisions—compared to 5% a century ago. Provide people with better calculations of risk (for not using seatbelts, not exercising, bad diets, etc.) and then adjust health premiums accordingly.
- Release All Nonviolent Offenders in Prison. Incarcerating nonviolent criminals costs us $22,000 per year—and has no social gain. Make nonviolent offenders go to counseling, get an education, do public serivce, and repay their victims.
- Legalize Assisted Suicide. Ludwig Minelli, founder of Dignitas, a right-to-die organization, believes that prohibiting suicide doesn't keep desperate people from trying. Instead, provide dignified options—and counseling for people considering suicide.
- Forget Medical Privacy. Guest commentator Jamie Heywood of PatientsLikeMe believes "privacy has been used as an excuse by those who have a vested interest in hoarding" health care information. He wants us to share our personal data on-line in social communities.
You may or may not agree with them—but, if implemented, they certainly will change our world.
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