Unless we also have inexpensive, perfectly-accurage geneology, the risk of rescuing one's own ancestors from abusive situations and thereby causing oneself to no longer exist is too great. And one's ancestors, left orphaned by one's ceased existence, might be placed into abusive foster care situations, rendering one's self-sacrifice moot.
Yes, of course -- unless, of course, there are costs associated with that choice. It's a worthy goal, but not a goal worth absolutely any price. The potential prices in time travel scenarios extend up to destruction of the universe (in fiction; the only place I really know anything about time travel from).
Either that would be rewriting history, which would be a horrendous crime on the scale of multiple omnicides (or even worse, if we're wiping out the whole Universe), or we're just creating alternative versions of the children in alternative timelines, leaving the originals behind. And if the timeline can't be tampered with at all, then it's just impossible, because we'd already know it would happen. Or maybe we're working with more complex off-road alternative timelines within a larger unchangeable meta-timeline that cause themselves to disappear from the timeline due to a future event returning everything back into the status quo ante chronofuck, which is also pointless.
I like the Kage Baker method of rescuing children 5 minutes before inevitable death. I think rescuing children who are otherwise viable would result in too many ripples.
No, unless it were possible to know for sure that they'd never have had any descendants in their own time.
Even then, how far back can you go? How will we provide for them in the present day, not just in terms of subsistence but in terms of education and acclimatisation?
Define "abusive". Define "child". Define target species said "children" are members of.
(For example: does "abuse of children" cover neonates born with anencephaly (WARNING: graphic images) or other fatal neural tube defects who are being allowed to die?)
You unutterable fool!!1!! Aren't we DOOOOOOOOOOOOMed enough from staggering over population without dragging MORE potential breeders into the situation?!?11!
I cannot say yes, I cannot say no. What actions do these abused children take, what interactions with them both at the time, and later in life, that caused events to flow such that the time traveler's present happened?
Contemplating removing people en mass from the timestream for good reason, is like waiting in one's vehicle at a train crossing, watching an oblivious child try to hurry across.
You know that if nothing happens, the child will be hit by the train. You know that if you put your car in gear and drive between the child and train, you will destroy yourself, whatever your car hits... and the child might not be hit.
Perhaps a compromise would be to provide therapy, pull the child out of time, give them the ability to cope better, and put them back?
Incidentally, I just re-read Making Money. An obsessive, miserable, possibly Aspergers-suffering person was abducted and given an instant mind-fix by the use of a helpful Igor and a turnip. He became a well-adjusted, happy, content person... with absolutely no artistic talent whatsoever. Is it worth the disruption of all history to do this?
For the purposes of this poll, I am going to interpret "rescue" as including the possibility of altering events so that the abuse never takes place, rather than necessarily bringing them all forward to a nebulous future filled with highly trained foster parents.
l voted "no" at first, for the usual "You go to far!" reasons. Then l read the question again and answered "yes". After all, the question involves the caveat "possible"; this to me implies "where doing such won't cause problems with paradox, overpopulation, or other embarrassments". With that in mind, why not? Give 'em genetic enhancements and put ' em to work as time cops.
I am reminded of Nancy Kress's "And Wild for to Hold" http://www.uchronia.net/bib.cgi/label.html?id=kresandwil , although in that case it was adults and the motivation is preventing wars rather than godawful childhoods...
This mostly reminds me of Joanna Russ's "Bodies". That, and Gene Wolfe's "The Death of Hyle". Oh, and Kurt Vonnegut's bit somewhere about finding one's father in heaven and discovering that in heaven, he's a child. Then there's the conversation with the simulated HPLDian in "Altruizine" from Stanislaw Lem's Cyberiad. I think I'll stop there, although it's more pleasant to contemplate this than the characterizations in Death Note.
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