Author Topic: Organ Donation - Opinions and Discussions  (Read 7100 times)

I casually rejected organ donorship

because I'm a badass and my organs are too good for other people

I casually rejected organ donorship

because I'm a badass and my organs are too good for other people

you're an starfish
I could use those new kidneys

those new, functional, non-kidney-stone ridden kidneys.

I'm not an organ donor (I'm 14 >:U), though when I'm old enough I'll probably enroll in something like that because that sounds pretty nice

you're an starfish
I could use those new kidneys

those new, functional, non-kidney-stone ridden kidneys.
You want these kidneys?

People are against this?
People are paranoid that when you get into a huge accident and the doctors see that you're a donor, they think they won't work as hard or work at all. Which is really being pessimistic.

People are paranoid that when you get into a huge accident and the doctors see that you're a donor, they think they won't work as hard or work at all. Which is really being pessimistic.
I've never heard that fear in person, but I suppose it's a fair one.

But really, doctors are going to work just as hard on you as they can do if you're hurt.
Your life is more important than the life you may or may not help if your organs are transplanted.

I suppose another good question to go alongside Organ Donation is Blood Donation.
If you're an organ donor, are you also happy to donate blood?
Or would you happily donate an organ, but not your blood? (for personal or religious reasons).
Or is the reverse true, that you'd happily donate blood, but not Organs?

I've never donated blood, but I think I would do and probably will at some point.

I might be an organ donor. Mine should still be good.

I think it's selfish not to. I'm also opposed to a similar issue of burying people in coffins. It takes up unnecessary space and it'd make more sense to fertilize the earth with our delicious bodies.

I think it's selfish not to. I'm also opposed to a similar issue of burying people in coffins. It takes up unnecessary space and it'd make more sense to fertilize the earth with our delicious bodies.
Wooden coffins slowly decompose too, and most coffins aren't air-tight, so the bodies also decompose reasonably rapidly. (Preservatives like Formaldehyde slow this down)
Over time they fertilise the earth too.
Graveyards, particularly old/ancient ones are rather good at growing grasses and plants and flowers because of this.

But I don't think I'd go so far as to say it's selfish to bury the dead.
There's little salvageable from a dead body, and vital organs tend to be the few things of use. Donating those is a useful and nice thing to do, in my opinion.
The rest of the body however, is of little physical use to others.
And since it holds a sentimental value for other people, it's fine to bury or inter the dead.
I personally would prefer to be cremated, but I can see that that's even worse in terms of helping others, since it requires fossil fuels (or rather, fossil fuels are used for it).

I watched a programme on TV recently debating the problems with dealing with human remains.
In Britain atleast there's actually starting to become a shortage of available spaces for graves, particularly in city graveyards. Building more graveyards may then use up valuable land otherwise used for agriculture or construction of housing/industry.
And the other alternative of Cremation, which came about in some way to counteract the lack of burial space, is damaging the planet through the burning of fossil fuels.
It doesn't leave many choices available.
There are other things to do, but some aren't quite as morally sound for some. Say, liquedising the deceased.

what if you accidentally ingested a poison that faked death and your organs were harvested

what if you accidentally ingested a poison that faked death and your organs were harvested
Depends which ones.

Although you probably die. That'll teach you to drink fake-death poison.

Organ donation is nice and all but pro-"ethnics" and anti-"playing god" people need to forcefully oppressed so we can get on with 3d printing organs or using cloned cells so people don't have to die while waiting on a list for their years.

what if you accidentally ingested a poison that faked death and your organs were harvested
if you weren't an organ donor, they'd just bury you instead.
dont fake your own death.
Wooden coffins slowly decompose too, but slower. and most coffins aren't air-tight, so the bodies also decompose reasonably rapidly. inside a coffin. what use is decomposing a body inside a coffin?(Preservatives like Formaldehyde slow this down)
Over time they fertilise the earth too. i suppose.
Graveyards, particularly old/ancient ones are rather good at growing grasses and plants and flowers because of this. they're still a waste of space and resources.

But I don't think I'd go so far as to say it's selfish to bury the dead.
There's little salvageable from a dead body, and vital organs tend to be the few things of use. Donating those is a useful and nice thing to do, in my opinion. the non-vital stuff is still useful to the ground. no point in slowing down decomposition. or, if we start running out of space, we can cremate them.
The rest of the body however, is of little physical use to others.
And since it holds a sentimental value for other people, it's fine to bury or inter the dead. but you can still visit their tombstone if there's no coffin under it. no big deal.
I personally would prefer to be cremated, but I can see that that's even worse in terms of helping others, since it requires fossil fuels (or rather, fossil fuels are used for it).

I watched a programme on TV recently debating the problems with dealing with human remains.
In Britain atleast there's actually starting to become a shortage of available spaces for graves, particularly in city graveyards. Building more graveyards may then use up valuable land otherwise used for agriculture or construction of housing/industry.
And the other alternative of Cremation, which came about in some way to counteract the lack of burial space, is damaging the planet through the burning of fossil fuels.
It doesn't leave many choices available. mass graves are the best i think. while it's really tacky and remembering of the holocaust, it's the most efficient.
There are other things to do, but some aren't quite as morally sound for some. Say, liquedising the deceased. we should burn them with concentrated sun lasers.
responses in bold.

Depends which ones.

Although you probably die. That'll teach you to drink fake-death poison.
if you weren't an organ donor, they'd just bury you instead.
dont fake your own death.

what if it wasnt me doing it? what if an assassin did it?

what if it wasnt me doing it? what if an assassin did it?
if you were important enough to have an assassin plot this giant plan against you, then they'd probably check that you're actually alive.