I agree with you but the way parents look at the deafness, depends very much on the culture they grow up in.
For me, living in a world with so many different sounds, my wish for my child is that she is able to experience the same. For a deaf parent, growing up without sound and in a community where sign is the language and hearing is not a factor, sound is far down the list.
In between (and beyond probably) there are all sorts of variations on the subject.
So I can see that implanting a deaf child would start a reaction in the deaf corner that "deafness is looked down at", that "deaf people are not accepted" even that "the parents don't accept the deafness", "the child grows up without identity" and to extremes that "the 666 beast chip is now in their head".
From the hearing corner, the reaction is that "it's wonderful to hear and this is wished for the child" and "when succesfull the child will be able to communicate with everyone" up to extremes that "the child has to hear and speak because we all do"
It's difficult for a deaf person to imagine what it is like to hear. It's difficult for a hearing person what it is like not to hear.
Let's hope that these kind of messageboards can shed some light on both perspectives....