Should organ donation be manditory?

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darkfox85

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May 6, 2011
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Dags90 said:
darkfox85 said:
By the way, when you die (*when* you die) an autopsy must be conducted by law to determine your cause of death beyond reasonable doubt. Oh yes. Somewhere out there there's a scalpel with your name carved into it as it will be carved into you.
I wish that were the case consistently in the U.S. Many people die from genetic diseases that could have (and should have) been diagnosed at their parents' autopsy. Unsurprisingly, many people opt out of having people autopsied if they have the choice.

I think opt out is the better option.
Ah. Yes.

Sorry, I hadn't considered this. I know here in the UK that an autopsy is required and in a self-indulgent rush I forgot to think of other countries. I just assumed it was so in the USA, but so many things vary from state to state. I think I sacrificed solid argument to make that paragraph a little more... theatrical. Bad move on my part; and there's a whole mini-arguement in here as well.

If anyone wants to debate this matter privately, by all means, send me a message.
 

Shio

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Jun 4, 2011
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darkfox85 said:
By the way, when you die (*when* you die) an autopsy must be conducted by law to determine your cause of death beyond reasonable doubt. Oh yes. Somewhere out there there's a scalpel with your name carved into it as it will be carved into you.
No. An autopsy is only conducted if the death is suspicious and the doctor who writes the certificate of death declares it so. If you die of a disease or sickness, of old age or in an accident, if there is no reason to suspect foul-play, nothing happens. This coming from someone in the know about the morgue industry.

Considering millions upon millions of people die every day, it is simply impossible to give everyone an autopsy.
 

Sikratua

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Apr 11, 2011
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tomtom94 said:
It should definitely be opt-out rather than opt-in in my opinion, certainly in times of shortage.
I tried finding a video of it, but I couldn't. So, here's a transcript of George Carlin explaining everything that is wrong with what you just said.


George Carlin said:
Organ donor programs. Does that shit bother you a little bit? Sound like Joseph Mangle has been sitting in on some of those meetings or something. The thing that bothers me the most about it is, they're run by the motor vehicle bureau. I figure hey shit if you got to wait on a line that long for a kidney, fuck it. Do without. It's the motor vehicle bureau in most states who sends you the little card your supposed to carry right next to your driver's license, in your wallet. A little card, your supposed to fill it out, and on it your supposed to list the organs your willing to give in case you die. Oh, are these people out of their fucking minds or something? Do you honestly believe that if a paramedic finds that card on you in an automobile accident, he going to try to save your life? Bullshit! He's looking for parts man. Absolutely. "Look Dan, here's that lower intestine we've looking for. Nevermind the oxygen, this man's a donor." Bullshit, they can have my rectum and my anus. That's all I'm giving, take them and get out of here. Put them in your bag and get the fuck out of my life. That's all I'm giving. I don't want some guy poking around in me hoping I die, I want to live. I don't want to die. That's the whole secret of life...not dying! I figured that shit out alone in third grade.
Any questions? And, for the record, I am signed up to be an organ donor.
 

NightlyNews

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Mar 25, 2011
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Ramin 123 said:
Organs I'm not as sure about but when it comes to blood donation, it should be mandatory. I mean all that excuses I have heard are pathetic. I can't give blood because I'm Diabetic, yeah apparently I'm on the same category as someone with AIDS or something o_O. It really annoys me that so many people are afraid of a needle :|
America doesn't have a blood shortage. I'm AB+ my friend is O+ and gives all the time, but my blood is significantly less valuable and I get headaches every time I give blood.

Why in the hell should it be mandatory to take my significantly less valuable blood? Trust me in emergency situations where they don't have time to test or simply don't trust testing your blood they'd just use my friends anyway.
 

Sikratua

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Apr 11, 2011
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NightlyNews said:
America doesn't have a blood shortage. I'm AB+ my friend is O+ and gives all the time, but my blood is significantly less valuable and I get headaches every time I give blood.

Why in the hell should it be mandatory to take my significantly less valuable blood? Trust me in emergency situations where they don't have time to test or simply don't trust testing your blood they'd just use my friends anyway.
But, your blood isn't "less valuable." While Type O is a universal donor for red blood cells, AB is the universal donor for plasma.

The rest of it, about how there's "not a blood shortage," yeah... That's kinda bullshit, man. Your friend's blood usually ends up solely being used on people with O+ blood, because not enough people donate Type O blood. Me? I'm O- (the actual Universal Donor for red blood cells) and donate the double pull every 16 weeks.
 

AgDr_ODST

Cortana's guardian
Oct 22, 2009
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I'd be in favor of making it mandatory. And having to opt out instead of volunteering your organs by way of the card.
 

nuba km

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The_root_of_all_evil said:
nuba km said:
See this argument doesn't work on me as my logic is, once I am dead anything that happens to my corpse doesn't really matter, I don't care if it is used as a urinal.
The argument is meant to fail to prove the futility of appealing to all aspects of humanity.

Even under the current systen, you'd be fine to have your body donated to tigers or even cannibals. I believe Germany actually does it, though that may just be rumour.
Also to answer your question I would be fine with having the remainder of my corpse to be fed to the animals.
But would you be equally fine with feeding someone else's corpse to them. Someone who didn't have the chance/ability to opt out?
the gm does say that he means a opt-out system so every person would have the chance to opt out, and to answer your question, yes, why? because they are dead so they can't exactly judge me or feel hurt by what I am doing. I mean people could say they will bury you (or what ever you want to happen to your corpse) but they could end up stuffing it and using it has a coat hanger, you wouldn't know and it wouldn't affect you.
 

mik1

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Dec 7, 2009
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It shouldn't be mandatory because that kind of seems like the government saying you must donate your organs. Which doesn't sound very good.

Though everyone should donate their organs there's no reason not to.
 

S3Cs4uN 8

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Apr 25, 2011
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Personally i see organ donor(ing?) as a bit unneeded if we invested more in stem cell research we could just grow organs any way.


I would never donate my organs to anyone regardless if Im living or dead if they couldn't look after their own organs they can die just like very one else my organs are staying in me.
 

samfergo

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May 18, 2010
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I dont think it should be mandatory, I mean in Australia the decision for it is thrust upon you at a young age and if you havent thought about it prior its a big decision for some, others it may be a no brain.
 

Killclaw Kilrathi

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Dec 28, 2010
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Sylvine said:
Same to You. Read the OP, not just the thread title. Even before the clarification edit, the first line says:

"I thourght mabye unless said otherwise, you should mabye have your organs donated?". Badly worded, but still clearly an opt-out system.
That's fair enough, and I apologize for not picking up on that. I'm afraid I committed the forum sin of expecting a thread title to be consistent with the first post, so the opt-in part of it slipped my mind after a few pages. For the record most of my previous comments deal with mandatory donation, though I still have reservations about opt-out which I'll try to address.

Sylvine said:
For someone who hates to sound like a conspiracy theorist, You sure sound like one. Consider this: Ignoring the opt-out-forms of the deceased would be only insubstantially easier than forging donor cards. Anyone could forge the card itself, and if the "evil government" can make a record disappear, they can make it appear just as easily.
It's not so much the evil government I care about, it's the corporations who would inevitably take over this organ business. Even if not because of greed, the Democrats would privatize it to avoid being accused of "socialism", and the Republicans would do it because... well, because they're Republicans and support privatization (not to mention they tend to axe non-profit healthcare whenever they can, bad for business).

Think about this for a minute. Corporations are out for a profit, and with the US healthcare system the way it is the organs are going to go to the rich who can afford the highest level of insurance. Personally I trust my fellow man more than I would a corporation, and I don't trust either with my insides.

Sylvine said:
The hard truth is: You don't have control as soon as You are (brain)dead. You speak of Jehova's Witnesses - yes, I had the pleasure, my Mom used to be one. I'd like You to consider this, instead: If I go out, murder a Jehova's Witness, harvest his organs and blood and use them for transplants (hypothetical, crazy situations) - do they go to hell? If yes, they're fucked anyways, because there's always the possibility of someone desecrating the body. If no, it doesn't matter (to them) if they opt out and someone criminally decides to ignore that.

If there's an option not to donate, and You use it, and someone ignores it - that's a crime. But it's a different pair of shoes.
I'd say we both agree here, so this is fairly moot. I'm not going to argue for a religion I don't believe in, and this only really becomes an issue if donation is mandatory.

Sylvine said:
Being respectful of people's final wishes is not a law of nature, it's a convention. If my final wish was for some bastard to be murdered, no one would legally endorse it. One could argue that not donating a perfectly good organ which someone desperately needs is aequivalent to murder. It certainly can fall under failure to render assistance, which IS a crime in many a state. Now, when the person's alive, there are other considerations. When the person is dead, though, and in a secular state...?
But isn't that a fairly dangerous view to hold? The argument itself is solid, I'll give you that, but here we have to worry about the natural progression of this. What you're arguing in favour for is essentially a legally enforced charity, the notion that we all have a duty to be charitable towards others and if we're not it makes us criminals. What happens when they start reconsidering the exceptions for living people? I'm not going to sit here and talk about people being fed wholesale into sci-fi organ harvesters, but consider this. I have two kidneys, and only need one to live. Someone out there is dying who could use my spare kidney, so why shouldn't he have it? My health will suffer somewhat, but his will suffer more because of my lack of action. Their death is my criminal negligence!

Sylvine said:
Also, for the record: Yes, actually, I do. I'm sceptical, but I can't imagine living in a state without having at least some measure of trust in the governing apparatus. Or, to put it differently: I trust my fellow human even less to do the right thing. Hell, I was even too lazy to do it myself up 'til now, and I support organ donations ideologically. I'm walking proof that the opt-in system fails on at least one level.
It's your choice to be lazy to opt-in, that's part of the system. The idea is that those who are passionate enough about it can do it, but by default the state keeps away from using your body for such things without permission. If they start telling people that they've essentially given implied permission at birth, that's when I start to get worried.
 

Jaime_Wolf

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Jul 17, 2009
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I've never even thought about that, but you're absolutely right. Personally, I don't have a huge problem stepping on religious toes and suggesting mandatory enrollment. Though realistically, an opt-out system is the only thing that would even have a faint chance at passing within our lifetimes.

I understand that people's family's might be uncomfortable with the idea, though I think that would pass after one or two generations. What I do not understand is the argument that dead people might be uncomfortable with donating their organs. Last I heard, dead people aren't uncomfortable about anything on account of their being dead.
 

kouriichi

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Sep 5, 2010
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I think it should be 'opt-out' instead of 'opt-in'.

Your organs can help others more then yourself.
Especially if your dead.
Not like anyone would notice a missing kidney at your funeral, with that nice suit on and such.
 

A Free Man

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May 9, 2010
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Of course it should be. Humans are way to sentimental in my opinion. I mean let me put it this way, if pretending that your loved ones went to a kingdom made of candy makes you feel better about them dying, all the power to you, you can feel free to think whatever you like. But if you are willing to condemn people who are actually alive just to maintain that delusion (regardless of whether you believe it is true) is just wrong. Once people are dead they are just meat and bones, as far as I'm concerened if my organs can help anyone even in the slightest bit I would have no problem donating everything.