boooeee
Dart Fener
- Joined
- Aug 14, 2002
- Messages
- 2,671
Fair point. I think this is probably the crux of the issue. I understand how people would me made uncomfortable by this. It's definitely a checkmark in the "Con" column.But the real problem with this very dumb idea is that it creates a society that I, at least, do not want to live in. Prostitution is illegal in part because no little girl grows up thinking "I want to be a prostitute someday." Kidney donation for profit should be illegal for the same reason. The only people who will ever do it are those who have to because their minds, their efforts, and their creativity have no value. Let's spend money making everyone valuable, not cutting off pieces of the ones who aren't.
However, in the "Pro" column, we have the 3,886 people who died in 2004 while on the kidney transplant waiting list. If we can dramatically increase the supply of available organs, we have a direct, concrete benefit in lives saved. I'm not convinced that allowing paid organ donation is going to have any long term negative societal impact.
Also, I should clarify that I am not advocating a true free market solution in which both buyers and sellers compete on price. Let's keep the current system of prioritizing organ recipients based on need and prognosis. The proposed approach would affect the supply side only by increasing the number of available kidneys. Also, I see nothing wrong with implementing a price cap (or maybe just a flat rate), as long as the cap isn't set too low that it doesn't increase organ donation.