"...utilitarianism can be used to justify  actions that are clearly immoral. Consider the case of a severely  deformed fetus. The child is certain to live a brief, albeit painless  life. He or she will make no contribution to society. Society, however,  will bear great expense. Doctors and other caregivers will invest time,  emotion, and effort in adding mere hours to the baby's life. The parents  will know and love the child only long enough to be heartbroken at the  inevitable loss. An abortion negates all those "utility" losses. There  is no positive utility lost. Many of the same costs are involved in the  care of the terminally ill elderly. They too may suffer no pain, but  they may offer no benefit to society. In balancing positives and  negatives, and excluding from the equation the objective sacredness of  all human life, we arrive at morally repugnant decisions. Here  deontological and virtue ethics steer us clear of what is easier to what  is right." 
- J.P. Moreland, Utilitarianism and the Moral Life

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