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I take exception to the term "snidely".

Apart from that, this is just the usual "there is no such thing as the slippery slope" contention.

Then five years later it's "But how were we to know?"

The general path of this sort of thing is:

(1) We promise, cross our hearts and hope to die, that polygenic screening will not be used except to prevent hereditary diseases

(2) Okay, 'hereditary disease' has been defined in too limited a sense, let's expand it to cover these heart-string tugging cases

(3) Wouldn't you want to give your children the gift of a better life? If they were polygenically selected to be smarter/taller/prettier/extrovert/athletic, they would have such a better life, studies have shown it, it's Science and you can't argue with Science

(4) There are still people out there who are hold-outs about their dysgenic heritage. They will be encouraged by the state to consider polygenic selection of any offspring they intend to have

(5) If none of your embryos reaches the standards required for continuation of the process of pregnancy, you will be sterilised for the good of society

Honestly, that's like the third-worst scenario. The worse ones are inescapable dystopia and selection for negative-sum traits like height/exploitativity causing catabolic collapse (the latter is what you'd get accidentally from naïve selection on income, to be clear, and procreative beneficence also endorses deliberately doing it).

Beware of mean chickens.