I noticed something about the world that I find very unfair (besides the obvious unfairness of things like illnesses and stuff).
Which is that humans, in the years of developping, depend on their home and environment.
But some children are born into a bad home and environment (stress, malnutrition..)
The age at which they can free themselves from this situation
is the same age when most of development is done and unchangable.
I think this is an highly unfair system by nature, and takes away an individual's chance
for reaching its full potential by own will and power.
This has to be changed. Where a child gets born into should never determine their future,
especially not when it comes to health and condition.
Limb lengthening is a good alternative for people who feel like their
growth was stunted due to factors they had no influence on.
A better alternative would be growth plate restortion/reactivation..
maybe by a chemical substance or sth.
Stress and malnutrition are always risks in life, even after children grow into adults. If anything, while many children do suffer from stress, because they do experience challenging phases of life while being too young to have the experience and maturity to properly deal with this stress (as an adult you learn, for example, that many things that scared you as a child aren't really a big deal, like some of your peers not liking you in school or not scoring the best grades all the time), children don't have to deal with the responbility of paying bills, looking for and holding a job, dealing with serious diseases (although yes, some children suffer frm this) and the hurdles of getting old, raising children on their own, and so on. Many adults daydream about the time when they were still children and experienced the carefreeness, wonder and innocent curioisity that they will rarely feel in their adult lives.
While becoming taller is a valid and understandable wish for many people, limb lengthening should never be the first choice for "people who feel like their growth was stunted", as you've put it. Instead, they should lay a very critical eye on the idea they stunted their growth, as people's physical development can be quite resistant to stress and even malnutrition - seeing that 80% of an individual human's deviation from the median height can be attributed to genetic factors and 20% to environmental factors.