t-dub
Vapor Sloth
So, I understand this is a heavy topic but, it is of philosophical interest at the very least and I submit it to provoke intellectual discussion. I am becoming increasingly disturbed with the "scientific dictatorship" that Amerika is becoming. As our brand of fascism gains more footing in this country, I see the "masks" coming off the eugenicists. Since I am disabled, and a HEAVY user of the healthcare system, this topic concerns me a great deal. The SHORT article I am referring to is here:
http://www.bioedge.org/index.php/bioethics/bioethics_article/9901
From the article: "If killing were wrong just because it is causing death or the loss of life, then the same principle would apply with the same strength to pulling weeds out of a garden. If it is not immoral to weed a garden, then life as such cannot really be sacred, and killing as such cannot be morally wrong.
Questions:
Who gets to be the "gardener"? Who decides which "weeds" to pull? Am I a weed at this point?
According to Dr. Ezekiel J Emanuel, author of "The Complete Lives System", and Rahm Emanuel's brother, the government should be the "gardener" His paper on the allocation of scarce healthcare resources should scare the shit out of everyone here over the age of 40. http://econopundit.com/ezekiel_emmauel.pdf
How do we balance the "right to exist" with the economic realities of the world?
We see shortages not only of organs but of $ and medications as well. The Chinese "State Capitalism" model has effectively dealt with these realities in their typical fashion. The mobile execution vans with the transplant surgeons (organ harvesters) inside are all you need to know to "understand" what they are doing over there. Nat Geo did a special called "The Body Trade" hosted by Lisa Ling which shows the Chinese Organ Tourism trade in its full, horrific, light. Need a kidney? $60,000. A liver? $100,000 (prices subject to change) includes airfare, hotel, and burn phone. Interesting to note that the IMF and the UN consider Chinese "State Capitalism" to be the model for the world's future. From the original article:
"In view of well-publicised organ shortages, transplant surgeons are eager to increase the number of available organs. DCD is an important avenue. However, a nagging suspicion that these patients might not be dead is still a substantial stumbling block because the medical profession insists that donors must always be dead. But Sinnott-Armstrong and Miller have an solution:
[T]he dead donor rule is routinely violated in the contemporary practice of vital organ donation. Consistency with traditional medical ethics would entail that this kind of vital organ donation must cease immediately. This outcome would, however, be extremely harmful and unreasonable from an ethical point of view [because patients who could be saved will die]. Luckily, it is easily obviated by abandoning the norm against killing.""
At what point does society write me off and move on? Does the "social contract" I was forced to enter into in this country mean anything going forward into the future?
http://www.bioedge.org/index.php/bioethics/bioethics_article/9901
From the article: "If killing were wrong just because it is causing death or the loss of life, then the same principle would apply with the same strength to pulling weeds out of a garden. If it is not immoral to weed a garden, then life as such cannot really be sacred, and killing as such cannot be morally wrong.
Questions:
Who gets to be the "gardener"? Who decides which "weeds" to pull? Am I a weed at this point?
According to Dr. Ezekiel J Emanuel, author of "The Complete Lives System", and Rahm Emanuel's brother, the government should be the "gardener" His paper on the allocation of scarce healthcare resources should scare the shit out of everyone here over the age of 40. http://econopundit.com/ezekiel_emmauel.pdf
How do we balance the "right to exist" with the economic realities of the world?
We see shortages not only of organs but of $ and medications as well. The Chinese "State Capitalism" model has effectively dealt with these realities in their typical fashion. The mobile execution vans with the transplant surgeons (organ harvesters) inside are all you need to know to "understand" what they are doing over there. Nat Geo did a special called "The Body Trade" hosted by Lisa Ling which shows the Chinese Organ Tourism trade in its full, horrific, light. Need a kidney? $60,000. A liver? $100,000 (prices subject to change) includes airfare, hotel, and burn phone. Interesting to note that the IMF and the UN consider Chinese "State Capitalism" to be the model for the world's future. From the original article:
"In view of well-publicised organ shortages, transplant surgeons are eager to increase the number of available organs. DCD is an important avenue. However, a nagging suspicion that these patients might not be dead is still a substantial stumbling block because the medical profession insists that donors must always be dead. But Sinnott-Armstrong and Miller have an solution:
[T]he dead donor rule is routinely violated in the contemporary practice of vital organ donation. Consistency with traditional medical ethics would entail that this kind of vital organ donation must cease immediately. This outcome would, however, be extremely harmful and unreasonable from an ethical point of view [because patients who could be saved will die]. Luckily, it is easily obviated by abandoning the norm against killing.""
At what point does society write me off and move on? Does the "social contract" I was forced to enter into in this country mean anything going forward into the future?