Old thread, but it covers the discussion topic, so...
The problem is not "average" people wanting to become taller.
Here are the problems:
- Using the average of the tallest countries of the world to say "average". Perception of height is relative to where you live, but height is an objective measurement, and we are only one species. Being average in tall countries doesn't mean you're objectively average: it means you are subjectively average.
- CLL is admittedly by everyone here the most invasive, painful, time-consuming cosmetic procedure there is - also associated with long term consequences. Many LL vets here said this message in some sort of form: "if you are X height, don't do LL". For paco, it was 5'7/170cm. doomsday mentioned something like 5'8/173cm in this thread. BB says something like 178cm.
So, the crux of the question is: people are free to do whatever they want with their own hard-earned money and their own bodies, but what is seen as discrimination is more a concern for a flawed cost-benefit analysis. Talking about men, being average in a place like Denmark means being 180cm. If you want to do this mainly because of women, online surveys put the ideal height for men at around 180cm in metric countries and 183cm (6 feet) in Imperial ones. So it seems that people who are around that height range and have women as one of the main concerns/reasons for wanting to undergo broken bones, with a gap slowly filled apart, plus lifelong consequences, are not being as sound of mind as many here would like them to be. They could, in all likelihood, get the same increased success with women that CLL would give them through non-invasive ways. I find cases similar to Helloworld's, mentioned in this thread, more understandable: being and feeling short within your own family, and not wanting to feel that way, or wanting to change that.
At the end of the day, like I mentioned, everyone is free to do what they want with their own bodies, granted they're not harming anyone else. I'll respect the decision of even a 190cm guy, as long as it seems to me he has done proper research about what this actually is, and he was honest with his reasons to want something like CLL. If he tells me it is about women, I'll refer him to those surveys and tell him to consider other avenues. If he straight tells me he just always wanted to be taller than that, has shown that he has done proper research and knows this is far from a nosejob, and is only willing to go to the best doctors, without seemingly risking his perspectives of future employment, retirement, and physical mobility, then I can't say anything. I wouldn't do it, but it's his life.