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In Israel, Potential Organ Donors Could Jump the Queue

laron writes "In Israel, a new law is in the making: Holders of donor cards and their families would get preference if they should need an organ for themselves. Apparently this initiative faces resistance from Orthodox rabbis, who hold that organ donation is against religious law. Jacob Lavee, director of the heart transplant unit at Israel's Sheba Medical Center, and one of the draftees of this new law, hopes that a broader pool of organs will ultimately benefit everyone, but acknowledges that one of his primary motivations is 'to prevent free riders.' (Apparently receiving an organ is OK under religious law.)"

582 comments

  1. pig heart donors however by goffster · · Score: 4, Funny

    can go to the end of the line

    1. Re:pig heart donors however by MrDoh! · · Score: 2, Funny

      Mmm, Bacon.

      --
      Waiting for an amusing sig.
    2. Re:pig heart donors however by phantomfive · · Score: 1
      Off topic or not, the sig at the bottom of the page at the moment says:

      Tip of the Day: Never fry bacon in the nude. [Correction: always fry bacon in the nude; you'll learn not to burn it]

      Such quandaries.

      --
      Qxe4
    3. Re:pig heart donors however by Paradigm_Complex · · Score: 4, Informative

      I realize you meant that as a joke, but in case anyone was curious it is okay under Jewish law (as interpreted by most Jews, reform conservative and most orthodox) to receive something along those lines. For the most part, if it's for medical purposes, pork is fine. Saving a life takes precedence here.

      --
      "A witty saying proves nothing." - Voltaire
    4. Re:pig heart donors however by Mr.+Freeman · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Saving YOUR life takes precedence. Why is it OK to receive an organ but not to give one? That organ must have been removed in order to be given and then received. If it's a sin to give an organ then it would follow that receiving an organ is benefiting from a sin and thus is a sin in and of itself.

      --
      -1 disagree is not a modifier for a reason. -1 troll, flaimbait, redundant, overrated are NOT acceptable substitutes.
    5. Re:pig heart donors however by clarkkent09 · · Score: 1, Troll

      For the most part, if it's for medical purposes, pork is fine. Saving a life takes precedence here

      How nice. And for more details on various fantasies of ignorant old farts: http://www.chabad.org/search/keyword_cdo/kid/8213/jewish/Pig.htm

      Wearing shoes made of pigskin - cool. Having pigs as pets - not cool. Why? Who cares.

      --
      Negative moral value of force outweighs the positive value of good intentions.
    6. Re:pig heart donors however by Hadlock · · Score: 2, Informative

      Consult your local Rabbi. Rabbis love to discuss this sort of thing at length and can probably give you a great answer. I don't agree with Israel's politics, but Judaism is actually a very well reasoned religion and have revised their decisions on various things in modern times such as use of electricity on the sabbath, etc. They actually publish these decisions, and I'm sure an actual Jew will chime in here with the name of this collection of published "decisions" that you can then refer to regarding organ donation. I'm willing to bet it falls in the same "vein" as Tattooed Jews can't be buried in a formal Jewish cemetery. As I understand it, (again, someone feel free to jump in here and correct me) man is created in God's image, therefore is as close to perfection as you can already make it (i.e. body is temple, etc). To alter your body (tattoos, organ donations) is to desecrate it (the temple of God) is to disrespect God. So you could donate your organs, but you couldn't be buried in a Jewish cemetery, which as far as I can tell is their form of excommunication.

      --
      moox. for a new generation.
    7. Re:pig heart donors however by ars · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Jews do not believe it's wrong to donate. What they believe is that, as long as a persons heart is beating they are alive.

      Meaning: They believe it's wrong to murder someone to harvest organs.

      Others believe that after brain death the person is dead, and it's not murder.

      The argument is not over organ donation, which even the strictest rabbi agrees with.

      The argument is over the definition of death, since most organ donation are done after brain, but not cardiac, death.

      --
      -Ariel
    8. Re:pig heart donors however by Concern+Is+A+Faggot · · Score: 0

      Saving YOUR life takes precedence. Why is it OK to receive an organ but not to give one? That organ must have been removed in order to be given and then received. If it's a sin to give an organ then it would follow that receiving an organ is benefiting from a sin and thus is a sin in and of itself.

      Religious reasons.

      --
      Help! Help! I've been moded down by a Jewish conspiracy!
    9. Re:pig heart donors however by Stormwatch · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Judaism is actually a very well reasoned religion

      Meaning: they are used to making up excuses for their irrational dogmas.

      As I understand it ... man is created in God's image, therefore is as close to perfection as you can already make it

      Cute. Except they make an exception for that one bit that's your most sensitive erogenous zone. And rabbis dare call that bit an imperfection. And even deny the pain that the procedure to "fix it" leads to pain and negative side effects, or even pretend these are a good thing.

      See a dogma, see a contradiction, make up absolute bullshit to keep dogma. Is this "reasoned"? Come on. Judaism is every bit as irrational and retarded as every other religion - but ESPECIALLY retarded for that one dogma, one so insane that it makes my blood boil in rage. If I sound disrespectful, you got it right. I abhor religion in principle, but those that promote genital mutilation, I regard as nothing but evil.

    10. Re:pig heart donors however by Hal_Porter · · Score: 1

      It's like "it's not gay if you're the pitcher" I suppose.

      --
      echo -e 'global _start\n _start:\n mov eax, 2\n int 80h\n jmp _start' > a.asm; nasm a.asm -f elf; ld a.o -o a;
    11. Re:pig heart donors however by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Mod this man up!

    12. Re:pig heart donors however by jimicus · · Score: 1

      I'm willing to bet it falls in the same "vein" as Tattooed Jews can't be buried in a formal Jewish cemetery. As I understand it, (again, someone feel free to jump in here and correct me) man is created in God's image, therefore is as close to perfection as you can already make it (i.e. body is temple, etc). To alter your body (tattoos, organ donations) is to desecrate it (the temple of God) is to disrespect God. So you could donate your organs, but you couldn't be buried in a Jewish cemetery, which as far as I can tell is their form of excommunication.

      Where do they stand on Jews that have received radiotherapy? It's normal to put a very small tattoo (literally a tiny blue spot) on the skin where the machine will be treating so as to ensure that the same area is treated every time.

    13. Re:pig heart donors however by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So am a bit lost - taking is ok and giving is not ? Doesnt sound like the golden rule to me!

    14. Re:pig heart donors however by Missing_dc · · Score: 2, Funny

      You certainly sound angry.
      Bitter even.
      You ever see Hedwig and the Angry Inch?

      --
      How amazed would you be to suddenly find that you just forgot what I wrote and you needed to reread my post.... again.
    15. Re:pig heart donors however by dherman · · Score: 1

      May the jew bashing commence...

      Give me a break, how is this a science/technology article??

    16. Re:pig heart donors however by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      nobody misses an ugly rat dick

    17. Re:pig heart donors however by vlm · · Score: 1

      To alter your body (tattoos, organ donations) is to desecrate it (the temple of God) is to disrespect God. So you could donate your organs, but you couldn't be buried in a Jewish cemetery, which as far as I can tell is their form of excommunication.

      What did they do with all the concentration camp survivors, whom in my ignorance I believe were tattooed against their will?

      My guess is they got a free pass since it was against their will.

      So, simply have the secular govt pass a law that tough s**t everyone is going to donate and most certainly not of their free will. Everyone benefits, the recipients, the govt whom saved them, and the over-controlling taliban types get something to complain about (controversy always benefits religion).

      --
      "Science flies us to the moon. Religion flies us into buildings." - Victor Stenger
    18. Re:pig heart donors however by ShadowRangerRIT · · Score: 1

      While this sounds wrong, Judaism was never designed for everyone. Many parts of the religion are impractical in a world of nothing but Jews, since the most inconvenient rules are worked around (by the observant) through the use of "Shabbas Goyim". Judaism doesn't have sins in the same way as Christianity, it has rules you need to follow because *you* are a Jew. Gentiles aren't subject to a lot of them (after all, they aren't Jews), and as long as the Gentile is breaking the rule instead of you, all is well (before you ask, only some rules are like this; murder for hire isn't religiously acceptable). While it may be selfish, a ban on donating organs coupled with being allowed to receive them makes total sense, but only non-Jews (or secular Jews) can donate in such a scenario.

      --
      $_ = "wftedskaebjgdpjgidbsmnjgcdwatb"; tr/a-z/oh, turtleneck Phrase Jar!/; print
    19. Re:pig heart donors however by Stormwatch · · Score: 1

      Since you like it, I will now, as a gift, fart in your general direction.

    20. Re:pig heart donors however by TheMidget · · Score: 1

      Can't you just fart while reading?

    21. Re:pig heart donors however by xaxa · · Score: 1

      Consult your local Rabbi.

      Alternatively, start thinking for yourself.

    22. Re:pig heart donors however by skunkiller3 · · Score: 2, Informative

      Except they make an exception for that one bit that's your most sensitive erogenous zone. And rabbis dare call that bit an imperfection. And even deny the pain that the procedure to "fix it" leads to pain and negative side effects, or even pretend these are a good thing.

      Except they're not the ones calling it an imperfection. Like it or not, they don't circumcise because they don't like how their wangs look. It's a symbol of the covenant between God and his chosen people.

      And no, I'm not Jewish....just a Troll-feeder, apparently.

    23. Re:pig heart donors however by Bakkster · · Score: 1

      As I understand it ... man is created in God's image, therefore is as close to perfection as you can already make it

      Cute. Except they make an exception for that one bit that's your most sensitive erogenous zone. And rabbis dare call that bit an imperfection. And even deny the pain that the procedure to "fix it" leads to pain and negative side effects, or even pretend these are a good thing.

      Circumcision is a sign of recognition of God's authority, not an attempt to 'fix' a mistake in the body. Where did you get that idea?

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    24. Re:pig heart donors however by gartogg · · Score: 1

      Umm... while you clearly have done no research, I'll just chime in too say that donating organs is a bit different than tattooing. The bible explicitly states you can't have tattoos. (Leviticus 19:27-29) Nothing to do with "God's Image."

      I can't expect you to know the bible, but RTFA, and perhaps you'd have at least some background on what you are talking about. It says exactly what the debate is.

      --
      I'm a concientious .sig objector.
    25. Re:pig heart donors however by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I agree completely. But an interesting question is why so many (about 50%?) Americans subscribe to genital mutilation practice? Can you explain that?

    26. Re:pig heart donors however by Sporkinum · · Score: 1

      That sounds Son of Sam-like. God told me to cut the end of your dick off.

      --
      "He's lost in a 'floyd hole"
    27. Re:pig heart donors however by Dog-Cow · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      Given that no Arabs in the region want peace and that every Arab nation in the Middle East tacitly, if not explicitly, supports the acts of terror that make peace impossible, I'd say Israel is doing OK.

    28. Re:pig heart donors however by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      see Pikauch nefesh on wikipedia

    29. Re:pig heart donors however by Stormwatch · · Score: 1, Troll

      Just one example of said belief here.

      But famed jewish philosopher Maimonides had an even more disturbing view. He acknowledged that the foreskin was useful, that it had sexual functions, that removing it hampered one's sexual capacity. And circumcision should be done because of that. I kid you not, that's a guy who thought an inferior sex life was a moral goal. How demented does one have to be, to take that shit seriously?

    30. Re:pig heart donors however by ultranova · · Score: 1

      As I understand it, (again, someone feel free to jump in here and correct me) man is created in God's image, therefore is as close to perfection as you can already make it (i.e. body is temple, etc). To alter your body (tattoos, organ donations) is to desecrate it (the temple of God) is to disrespect God. So you could donate your organs, but you couldn't be buried in a Jewish cemetery, which as far as I can tell is their form of excommunication.

      There seems to be a rather large difference between decorative alteration (tattoos) and alteration received as a result of saving someone's life (organ donation). You wouldn't be excommunicated because you received scars while pulling someone out of a burning car, right?

      --

      Forget magic. Any technology distinguishable from divine power is insufficiently advanced.

    31. Re:pig heart donors however by Bakkster · · Score: 1

      Sorry, but I have trouble calling foreskin the 'end of your dick' in this case. Similarly to how I wouldn't say getting a haircut is "chopping off the top of your head".

      I also wouldn't call foreskin a completely useless piece of flesh (I understand why most non-Jews prefer not to circumcise at birth), but it's also not strictly necessary (I understand why a Jew would continue to circumcise at birth).

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      Write your representatives! Repeal the 2nd Law of Thermodynamics!
    32. Re:pig heart donors however by Yankel · · Score: 1

      Ask three Rabbis and you get four answers. It just depends on who you consult. There's nothing stopping a Jew from donating his or her organs and still being buried in a Jewish cemetery. You won't be excommunicated for saving a life post-mortem. The concern is that the entire body should be buried. It's understood that a donated organ will eventually be buried after the recipient lived a long life (to 120) and passes. Jew receiving a donated organ must also make sure the now expired organ is buried appropriately.

      --
      --- Dan
    33. Re:pig heart donors however by lucian1900 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Regardless of how they justify it, it's still genital mutilation. And it's still fucking evil.

    34. Re:pig heart donors however by geekoid · · Score: 0

      Yes, I am evil because I want my child to have less infections and be at a lower risk of getting AIDS.

      Haha, jokes on you. I'm an atheist and I researched the subject extensively. So now you can't knee jerk attack religion, you have to come up with rational debate.

      A debate I have had many, many times.

      In fact, I will save you some time:
      I win.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    35. Re:pig heart donors however by mdwh2 · · Score: 1

      So surely they'd also believe it's wrong to receive such harvested organs, and therefore have no problem with this law?

    36. Re:pig heart donors however by OhHellWithIt · · Score: 1

      To alter your body (tattoos, organ donations) is to desecrate it (the temple of God) is to disrespect God. So you could donate your organs, but you couldn't be buried in a Jewish cemetery, which as far as I can tell is their form of excommunication.

      Marking the body is expressly forbidden in at least one of the mitzvot (commands) in Exodus or Leviticus. It was apparently a practice of neighboring idol worshipers. Organ donation, however, isn't anywhere in Torah, based on my admittedly incomplete readings.

      The general opinion in the Reform tradition is that organ donation is okay. And, in the Introduction to Judaism class I took several years ago, the rabbi teaching it said that all but a handful of mitzvot are secondary to preserving life. Organ donation was not listed in the handful of inviolable mitzvot, and since organ donation preserves life, I don't see where there is a conflict.

      There are, of course, outliers in any faith -- that is, to say, religious nut jobs -- and Judaism is no exception. My driver's license has the organ donor box checked, and so does my wife's. The meshuginah few who believe Torah teaches that they aren't to give that gift to others can take a hike -- to the back of the line.

      --
      "Who controls the past controls the future. Who controls the present controls the past." -- George Orwell
    37. Re:pig heart donors however by phlinn · · Score: 1

      Well, there's a bit more too i than that. Leviticus explicitly states "Ye shall not make any cuttings in your flesh for the dead, nor print any marks upon you.." at least as translated.

      --
      "Pulling together is the aim of despotism and tyranny! Free men pull in all sorts of directions" -- Havelock Vetinari
    38. Re:pig heart donors however by cthulu_mt · · Score: 1

      Those Orthodox Jews are citizens that get to vote and tend to be a very cohesive voting bloc. Pissing them off would be a poor choice for an elected official.

      --
      Virginia is for lovers. EVE is for griefers.
    39. Re:pig heart donors however by siriuskase · · Score: 1

      Hair isn't alive. Foreskins aren't dead or useless. They are analogous to a woman's inner labia, her most sensitive organ next to the clit. Without it the head of the penis is uncovered and becomes less sensitive. I wouldn't dream of clipping it off. Think of your daughter-in-law! BTW, do they even ask the father? IIRC, it was one of a bunch of routine questions the doc asks the mom while the dad is out telling the world he just had a son.

      --
      If you must moderate, please moderate as irrelevent, not something bad, because I'm sure someone will find this interest
    40. Re:pig heart donors however by geekoid · · Score: 1

      "... that removing it hampered one's sexual capacity"

      Except that's not true.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    41. Re:pig heart donors however by Maxo-Texas · · Score: 1

      Okay.. I'm going to have to blow my moderations to reply.

      >As I understand it, (again, someone feel free to jump in here and correct me) man is created in God's image, therefore is as close to perfection as you can already make it (i.e. body is temple, etc). To alter your body (tattoos, organ donations) is to desecrate it (the temple of God) is to disrespect God.

      So why is it not desecrated when you alter it to receive part of another person's body into it???!!!

      Sorry-- this guy is tattoo'd-- he's desecrated. But this guy has a woman's heart, and another man's kidney-- he's fine. Oh wait, it says here he Donated his corneas! Sacrilege! Throw his body on the ash heap!

      --
      She was like chocolate when she drank... semi-sweet at first and then increasingly bitter.
    42. Re:pig heart donors however by Stormwatch · · Score: 1

      In fact, it is true.

    43. Re:pig heart donors however by GargamelSpaceman · · Score: 1

      My brother and I were talking about circumcision, I being circumsised, and he not. He was telling me how he sort of wished he was, since while working as a CNA, he's seen many many old farts' peni and what happens to them in the old folk home. Basically, the foreskin will, if not regularly stretched, shrink so that it is impossible to get the tip of the penis out to clean off all the smegma. It's a nasty job that one would have to be er, ambitious to ever do, and the sort of thing that easily gets left for the people on the next shift so to speak. It's why people get bedsores etcetera. Nobody is ever at fault, and the ones whose job it is to do such, are contractors working shitty hours etc with next to no 'give a shit'. The stories I've heard about nursing homes are one reason I carry an organ donor card - If ever I am seriously fscked up, so that I am a borderline case, I want them to look at my donor card, and say, aw, he's a vegetable, and if we mark him that way on this card, then we can harvest his organs and save some other people.

      --
      ...
    44. Re:pig heart donors however by lwsimon · · Score: 1

      I am a bit taken aback by this - not so much by your stance on circumcision, but by your anger at Judaism.

      Most boys in the US are circumcised shortly after birth. As most Americans are Christians, there seems to be no real reason that we do this, other than tradition.

      As an uncircumcised male, I certainly don't feel that I need to rush out and have it done. Still, mutilation may be a bit of a strong word. I have family members that were circumcised in their pre-teen years due to repeated infections, and there didn't seem to be an issue with that.

      --
      Learn about Photography Basics.
    45. Re:pig heart donors however by vlm · · Score: 1

      Those Orthodox Jews are citizens that get to vote and tend to be a very cohesive voting bloc. Pissing them off would be a poor choice for an elected official.

      Polarized voting blocs are politically irrelevant, in any system.

      For example, 99%-ish of black folks vote democratic, every time. Therefore the democrats have no motivation to do anything for them, for gods sake its not like they're going to vote republican! Similarly, the republicans have no motivation to do anything for them, for gods sake its not like they're going to vote republican! Their orthodoxy makes them pretty much politically irrelevant.

      Once you understand this, you understand a lot about the American two party system. That's one reason why the loudest most extreme groups never really seem to get anywhere. And why people/legal citizens like corporations that donate to both parties mostly equally, pretty much get to have their way with us.

      So in this application, if the Orthodox are super-polarized, which my very limited understand of Israeli politics would indicate, their votes will not change under any circumstances. On the other hand, the leader of the Orthodox party might be replaced.

      If no one other than the Orthodox party (which might be vaguely irrelevant by super-polarization) really cares about the issue, except for people with friends and relatives who had their lives saved by a transplant...

      --
      "Science flies us to the moon. Religion flies us into buildings." - Victor Stenger
    46. Re:pig heart donors however by Nabbler · · Score: 1

      In classical strict christianity it is taught that the body must be buried whole and unmutilated, and for that reason organdonorship is not allowed, and I'm guessing since that is a classical stand it originates in the old testament? and thus is a jewish orthodox view too, right? Although you could argue a loophole that the the organ will later be buried 'properly' after the second users croaks :) I incidentally hear some strict wings of people with such beliefs even want to keep the parts that might get amputated after an accident or something to be later buried with their body.

    47. Re:pig heart donors however by tmosley · · Score: 1

      Correct. If ultra-orthodox don't want to give organs, then they can go to the back of the line.

    48. Re:pig heart donors however by Myopic · · Score: 1

      The obvious failure in the logic of your deduction is (ironically) that you apply logic to a religious belief. How silly of you to do so. I can tell you aren't religious, because a religious person would never have attempted to use logic in the first place.

    49. Re:pig heart donors however by Myopic · · Score: 1

      You certainly have a strong opinion, but don't think that all people agree. I rather like my circumcised penis, and I'm rather glad it was done when I was a baby. Your mileage may vary -- and, obviously, yours definitely does.

    50. Re:pig heart donors however by Bakkster · · Score: 1

      Hair isn't alive. Foreskins aren't dead or useless.

      Correct, there's a huge difference between the two. My only dispute is with the phrasing.

      Saying 'end of the penis' implies (in my mind, at least) the head of the penis, rather than the foreskin. It seems like a trick to win the argument on semantics rather than merits (which there are plenty of).

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    51. Re:pig heart donors however by billybacs · · Score: 0

      If nothing else, circumcision has a health benefit as well. It prevents bacteria build-up within the folds of skin. Regardless of the religious reasons behind it, the medical benefits are worth it in the long-term.

    52. Re:pig heart donors however by story645 · · Score: 1

      Um, not quite. Far as I've been told, the whole tattoo thing is some weird form of urban myth Jewish moms tell their kids so that they won't run out to get one. hillel article on it. There's also a secondary reason why people are allowed burial if they've got tattoos; if they do teshuvah (apologize to God/redeem themselves) for the act of getting the tattoo, it's all basically sorted out.

      Prohibiting organ donations has as much to do with the belief in the messiah and the eventual resurrection of the dead, which works out better if everyone is intact, as with desecration of the dead. Because the messianic stuff is usually the reason for the most radical stances, most mainstream Orthodox Rabbis often don't have any problem with organ donation so long as it's going to save a life. A secondary reason for allowing donation but not advocating signing the card is because of a fear that death may be hastened if a person seems to be in a vegetable state and has an organ for harvesting. Hastening death is a big bad sin, 'cause God is the one in ultimate control of when time ends.

      Just about every modern orthodox Jewish law traces back to the Shulchan Aruch

      --
      open source modern art: laser taggi
    53. Re:pig heart donors however by Abcd1234 · · Score: 1

      Still, mutilation may be a bit of a strong word.

      No, it's really not.

      According to your argument, African cultures that practice female genital mutilation are perfectly right to do so, as it's "tradition". Of course, that view is utterly absurd. What we're talking about, here, is the excision of healthy tissue from the human body for absolutely no justifiable reason. Which wouldn't be so bad if the procedure were only performed on consenting adults, but the procedure is primarily performed on infants.

      I have family members that were circumcised in their pre-teen years due to repeated infections

      If you can't see the difference between a surgical procedure performed for valid medical reasons, and one performed simply because of tradition, there's no hope for you.

    54. Re:pig heart donors however by cthulu_mt · · Score: 1

      Israel has a parliment, the Knesset, and a multiparty political system. Orthodox groups have in the past punished their representatives by turning them out of office. Their system really works much better than ours.

      --
      Virginia is for lovers. EVE is for griefers.
    55. Re:pig heart donors however by dryeo · · Score: 2, Insightful

      You're equating getting the most sensitive part of your dick cut off with a hair cut?
      A better comparison would be getting your lips removed at birth because it makes it easier to keep your teeth clean. With enough propaganda and if it is done at an early enough age to most people you would consider lips to be equal to hair.

      --
      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inverted_totalitarianism
    56. Re:pig heart donors however by Bakkster · · Score: 1

      Just one example of said belief here.

      I disagree with your interpretation of his answer. It seems to me his explanation is against the thought 'if we were supposed to be circumcised, wouldn't God have us born without foreskin?' I don't see the implication that the foreskin is a mistake, only that God's creation does not imply that the creation is not intended to be changed. Tell me if you think I'm totally off-base here.

      More importantly, it's pretty obvious that we're talking cultural Judaism rather than religious Judaism (even most of the Jews in Israel don't believe in God). Otherwise, the question wouldn't have needed to be asked, and the answer would have just been God told us to. So the question becomes: do they circumcise for religious or cultural reasons, and are either acceptable. Put another way, this isn't necessarily a question about religious 'mutilation', but of cultural.

      But famed jewish philosopher Maimonides had an even more disturbing view. He acknowledged that the foreskin was useful, that it had sexual functions, that removing it hampered one's sexual capacity. And circumcision should be done because of that. I kid you not, that's a guy who thought an inferior sex life was a moral goal. How demented does one have to be, to take that shit seriously?

      Again, while I may be totally off base about this, it still seems to me to be a reflection of the change of mainstream Judaism toward acting cultural norms rather than religious belief. If we were speaking merely of belief, the Genesis quote would be enough. However, if you have a Jewish man who does not believe in God, you need another reason.

      Long way of saying: if the person promoting circumcision is doing so for ulterior motives, I agree that is wicked. I have a hard time, though, condemning someone for circumcising a child in good faith and for the perceived good of their child.

      --
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    57. Re:pig heart donors however by dryeo · · Score: 1

      And you've tested this by having sex before and after getting circumcised?
      Considering how sensitive that piece of skin is I don't know how it couldn't hurt your sex life.

      --
      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inverted_totalitarianism
    58. Re:pig heart donors however by FunkSoulBrother · · Score: 1

      Wouldn't it follow, then, that a politician would NOT have to actually do anything for the Corporation in question? After all, its not like Exxon or Microsoft is going to stop donating to both parties, right?

    59. Re:pig heart donors however by Sebilrazen · · Score: 1

      Me and Leviticus don't get along, I shave my head, have tattoos and frequent professionals (only where it's legal).

      --
      "There are no facts, only interpretations." --Friedrich Nietzsche.
    60. Re:pig heart donors however by Bakkster · · Score: 1

      According to your argument, African cultures that practice female genital mutilation are perfectly right to do so, as it's "tradition". Of course, that view is utterly absurd.

      That's not his argument at all. Firstly, it's that the anger seems to be directed purely at Jews who circumcise infants, while many others circumcise infants without a pressing medical necessity as well. Either you are angry at everybody or nobody, you can't just pick one group if everything else remains equal.

      Secondly, the argument against 'mutilation' is that this is a relatively common and routine procedure. Labial 'circumcision' is not (to my knowledge) performed as a routine procedure. When there is surgery to correct a labial issue, the type of cut is significantly different from that of ritual mutilation, whereas a circumcision for penile infection, a Jewish bris, or simply so they 'fit in' the procedure is exactly the same.

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    61. Re:pig heart donors however by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      GP's argument about tradition is a pretty poor reason, but the infection bit is a valid point.

      Male circumcision at birth is the equivalent of removing every infant's appendix at birth to head off potential future infection, if an appendectomy was a quick non-invasive surgery.

      That analogy doesn't hold for female genital mutilation, which is why we see it as wrong.

      Of course, the American medical establishment is less gung-ho about circumcision as it once was, and more parents are choosing against it.

    62. Re:pig heart donors however by Abcd1234 · · Score: 1

      Firstly, it's that the anger seems to be directed purely at Jews who circumcise infants,

      Bullshit. The article is about Israel, so naturally judaism is the subject, here, but the anger is directed at the practice of circumcision, a practice that happens to be rooted in judeo-christian beliefs. So yes, it's anger directed at Jews, *because* they practice circumcision. I'm sure if you were to ask the OP, he'd express the same anger toward *anyone* who promoted the forced excision of healthy tissue from individuals unable to give their consent.

      Secondly, the argument against 'mutilation' is that this is a relatively common and routine procedure.

      That's not an argument against defining it as mutilation. That's simply an argument for normalizing it. Or are you saying that any practice accepted by a culture, no matter how abhorrent, can't be described as "mutilation"?

      Labial 'circumcision' is not (to my knowledge) performed as a routine procedure.

      It is in some African cultures. Why do you think there was such an uproar over the issue?

    63. Re:pig heart donors however by zorro-z · · Score: 1

      'Irrational dogma...' 'absolute bulllshit...' 'nothing but evil.'

      How does the post above get modded as anything other than antisemitic flamebait?

      --
      -Z
    64. Re:pig heart donors however by Abcd1234 · · Score: 1

      GP's argument about tradition is a pretty poor reason, but the infection bit is a valid point.

      No, it's really not. Studies have shown that while male circumcision does reduce incidents of urinary tract infection, the absolute rates of such infections is vanishingly small, and thus the procedure can't be justified on those grounds. We're talking about cutting incident rates from something like 2% to 1% (BTW, those are invented numbers, I believe actual incident rates are lower than that, but I'm too lazy to find specific statistics).

    65. Re:pig heart donors however by Therilith · · Score: 1

      And permanently removing part of someones penis doesn't seem like a decision that should be left to the individual?

      What the hell is wrong with you?

    66. Re:pig heart donors however by Stormwatch · · Score: 1

      Breaking news: person criticizes judaism, gets labeled anti-semitic. Film at 11.

    67. Re:pig heart donors however by Shadow+of+Eternity · · Score: 1

      That falls under the law of "Pikuach Nefesh", which explicitly states that saving a life is more important than every OTHER law except for prohibitions against trading a life for a life, forbidden sexual relations (animals, kids, family, etc), and certain things considered "defaming god's name".

      Jews are not only permitted but affirmatively required to do anything in their power save those 3 exceptions to save someone's life.

      This is why the current orthodox law states it's not only allowed but encouraged to donate organs and it's just a few loud asshats still disagreeing with that.

      --
      A bullet may have your name on it but splash damage is addressed "To whom it may concern."
    68. Re:pig heart donors however by asaz989 · · Score: 1

      It's not okay to give one because of all sorts of prohibitions on mutilating your own body - no tattoos, no piercings aside from ear and nose (just cartilage), etc. The saving a life thing applies to *anyone's* life; the more shut-in Israeli orthodox types tend to disregard that commandment in favor of being batshit nuts.

    69. Re:pig heart donors however by Bakkster · · Score: 1

      I'm sure if you were to ask the OP, he'd express the same anger toward *anyone* who promoted the forced excision of healthy tissue from individuals unable to give their consent.

      Assuming he does, I have no issue. Assuming he only cares because it's tied to a religious belief, then I have an issue.

      That's not an argument against defining it as mutilation. That's simply an argument for normalizing it. Or are you saying that any practice accepted by a culture, no matter how abhorrent, can't be described as "mutilation"?

      I wasn't talking about culture at all there, I was talking about medical practice. The medical community (or at least, a good portion of it) finds the risk minor enough to classify circumcision as an elective procedure. More importantly, there are benefits gained from the procedure, regardless of how small or unnecessary.

      I would agree that in most cases, circumcision should only be performed when medically necessary or for a consenting adult. However, I still can not rightly classify it as 'mutilation' because it is an elective out-patient procedure.

      It is in some African cultures. Why do you think there was such an uproar over the issue?

      Again, in this case it is a routine cultural practice, not a routine medical practice. See above.

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      Write your representatives! Repeal the 2nd Law of Thermodynamics!
    70. Re:pig heart donors however by Shadow+of+Eternity · · Score: 1

      Article's wrong, there's a few loud asshats here and there still arguing against it but pretty much the entirety of the heirarchy from the chief rabbis down considers organ donation not just permissable but a part of "Pikuach Nefesh".

      Look that one up, it'll explain everything.

      --
      A bullet may have your name on it but splash damage is addressed "To whom it may concern."
    71. Re:pig heart donors however by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ugh. Please. Let me venture a guess: in referring to it as "genital mutilation", you're probably one of those crazy people who equate circumcision with F.G.M? I'm also assuming you probably haven't had a circumcision, or else you would know that it is a very rare exception to find a man who was circumcised as a baby who resents it or even remembers it. The "erogenous zone" you're referring to is not necessary, is not missed, and let me assure you, everything works perfectly well without it. There is no missing sensation because it was removed.

      Now, unless you have a traumatic memory of being a few days old and feeling the pain of having your foreskin removed, I think your argument is completely without relevant standing or perspective. Whether it is the case or not with you, you have to grant that most of the people debating (against) male circumcision online typically have some sort of ulterior motivation, whether it's anti-religion (I'm guessing this is you), anti-Semitic (maybe you as well?), etc. And by the way, assuming that parents only choose circumcision for religious reasons is naive. For many it's simply a cultural choice.

      So... uh... get off your soap box, and don't weep for our foreskins for us -- we don't want them.

    72. Re:pig heart donors however by pydev · · Score: 1

      I don't agree with Israel's politics, but Judaism is actually a very well reasoned religion

      All the major religions love to construct pseudo-logical arguments to support their irrational dogmas and rules. But as we know from mathematics, if you start of with a set of inconsistent premises, you can arrive at any conclusion you like through the application of logic and reasoning.

      As I understand it, man is created in God's image, therefore is as close to perfection as you can already make it

      Man "is" not created at all. Man evolved from primates in response to evolutionary pressures. And he keeps evolving and changing as the environment is changing. It's not that man is "imperfect", it's that the notion of "perfection" in regards to a biological organism makes no sense.

    73. Re:pig heart donors however by Abcd1234 · · Score: 1

      I wasn't talking about culture at all there, I was talking about medical practice.

      Now you're just mincing words. A medical practice is one where there's a medical justification for the procedure. However, in the case of male circumcision, there is virtually no evidence that it provides any medical benefit whatsoever, aside from a tiny decrease in the already tiny incident rates for male urinary tract infections. As such, if you're gonna try and whitewash this "procedure", at best it could be described as a cosmetic one. But it's a procedure that's performed for cultural, not medical, reasons.

      However, I still can not rightly classify it as 'mutilation' because it is an elective out-patient procedure.

      Bullshit! Since when has an infant been able to give their consent for this "elective out-patient procedure"? The very definition of "elective" is that there's a choice involved, which is clearly not the case for male or female genital cutting.

      Again, in this case it is a routine cultural practice, not a routine medical practice. See above.

      All the supposed medical benefits for circumcision, which have largely been debunked, have been attempts to post-justify a procedure that's fundamentally rooted in judeo-christian tradition, nothing more. As such, male circumcision is no more of a "medical practice" than female circumcision, and absolutely qualifies as a "cultural practice".

    74. Re:pig heart donors however by pydev · · Score: 1

      Their system really works much better than ours.

      Really? Measured how? The number of political scandals? How vociferous the debates are? What do you think is gained by having extremists that represent only a small percentage of the population in decision making bodies?

      Maybe both you and Israel would do well to remember that it was that kind of political system that caused German democracy to collapse in the 1930's.

    75. Re:pig heart donors however by Golddess · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Ok, I'll feed the troll.

      less infections

      You don't cut off your kids feet because of the bad things that can afflict feet, you teach them to properly care for their feet. Why should a boy's dick be any different?

      be at a lower risk of getting AIDS

      That's odd, I thought it was unprotected sex that could transmit AIDS. Are you telling your child to have unprotected sex? Because that's the only way it could possibly be true that having a mutilated dick puts you at a lower risk of getting AIDS.

      --
      "I'm not sure I like the fugnutish tone you used in your post!" -RogL (608926)-
    76. Re:pig heart donors however by natehoy · · Score: 1

      But if I have my diseased organs taken out and have the organs of a dead person put in, that's more acceptable to God than if I allow bits of me to be reused after I'm dead?

      Actually, fine, whatever. It's a fine theological point that a Rabbi could not doubt explain quite concisely. It doesn't change the fact that the decision makes its followers a drain on an already overburdened system. You cannot expect equal treatment without equal willing participation on an overburdened system.

      The point of the law is that, if a person is unwilling to add to the bank of available organs (regardless of reason), they should not expect the same level of priority for a needed organ when it becomes available. Note the distinction between "unwilling" and "unable" (for example, if a person's organs are unsuitable for donation that should not push them down the list).

      Judaism is actually a very well reasoned religion and have revised their decisions on various things in modern times such as use of electricity on the sabbath, etc.

      Maybe some "golden rule" treatment of the organ donor/recipient line will prompt another one of these well-reasoned decisions, and either ban the receipt of organs or allow the donation of them.

      --
      "This post contains words, known to the State of California to cause thought. Wash brain thoroughly after reading."
    77. Re:pig heart donors however by cthulu_mt · · Score: 1

      Really? Measured how? The number of political scandals? How vociferous the debates are? What do you think is gained by having extremists that represent only a small percentage of the population in decision making bodies?

      Measured in representation of the views of their constituents.

      Maybe both you and Israel would do well to remember that it was that kind of political system that caused German democracy to collapse in the 1930's.

      It wasn't Parlimentary Democracy that caused the collapse of the Wiemar Republic. You may want to refer to the soul crushing economic conditions.

      --
      Virginia is for lovers. EVE is for griefers.
    78. Re:pig heart donors however by Bakkster · · Score: 1

      Bullshit! Since when has an infant been able to give their consent for this "elective out-patient procedure"? The very definition of "elective" is that there's a choice involved, which is clearly not the case for male or female genital cutting.

      And this is where I feel your point is valid. It's not elective for the child, and that's a reasonable thing to be upset about.

      And again, as per the medical/cultural debate, male circumcision is a medical procedure performed for cultural reasons. Female genital mutilation is a cultural procedure performed for cultural reasons. This is not to say that male circumcision is justified in any or all cases, only that it is not 'mutilation' any more than it would be for parents to insist on the removal of their child's tonsils.

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      Write your representatives! Repeal the 2nd Law of Thermodynamics!
    79. Re:pig heart donors however by lwsimon · · Score: 1

      Yes, mutilation is too strong a word.

      Female "circumcision" removes a functioning part of the person's body. It limits (or eliminates) enjoyment of sex, and is irreversible. In addition, the conditions under which it is done are horrible, resulting in much scarring and risk of infection. There are *no* medical benefits to this, not even ones you deem not worth the procedure.

      Male circumcision - performed in a modern hospital setting - is more akin to piercing a child's ears. Yes, it is elective, and yes, it is basically a cosmetic procedure - but to compare it to the removal of the clitoris isn't rational.

      --
      Learn about Photography Basics.
    80. Re:pig heart donors however by Abcd1234 · · Score: 1

      And again, as per the medical/cultural debate, male circumcision is a medical procedure performed for cultural reasons. Female genital mutilation is a cultural procedure performed for cultural reasons.

      And I'm saying there is absolutely no basis for making that distinction. What makes male circumcision a "medical procedure" and female genital mutiluation a "cultural procedure"? Neither affords any medical benefit whatsoever. In both case people have tried to post-justify the procedure on medical grounds, and in both cases the arguments have been found baseless. There is literally no difference between the two procedures, save that one is performed on a penis, and the other performed on a vagina.

      Well, of course, one is routinely performed in the western, judeo-christian-influenced world while the other isn't.

    81. Re:pig heart donors however by Hadlock · · Score: 1

      Congratulations, your post adds nothing to the. Go post your atheist agenda elsewhere, we've all heard it here before.

      --
      moox. for a new generation.
    82. Re:pig heart donors however by LordVader717 · · Score: 1

      Either way the question still stands. Organ donation is a form of human charity where one donor gives to an unknown receiver. If you aren't willing to give, be it for religious considerations or just fear, how can you possibly be okay with other people's body's being "harvested" for you?

      The answer is the same as ever. Most people change their view on organ donation radically when they or someone close is affected.

      Apart from this basic justness argument, the debate over the exact definition of death isn't uniquely Jewish. People's commit to donation because of confidence in our understanding of medicine and also just simply the desire to help, not because their religion either forbids or permits it.
      What a lot of people certainly object to is if you allow religious beliefs to interfere with your personal moral judgment, especially if the religious choice can mean the death of another person.

    83. Re:pig heart donors however by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Bullshit. A bedsore is an entirely different thing.

    84. Re:pig heart donors however by lucian1900 · · Score: 1

      First of all, I am angry at all parents and medics that circumcise minors without a real medical reason.

      Secondly, I am angry at what religion does to people, even as far as mutilating their children because their imaginary friend told them so.

    85. Re:pig heart donors however by Hadlock · · Score: 1

      A Rabbi is probably going to give you the clearest answer on how Rabbinical decisions are come to. I'm in no way promoting religion, I'm actually agnostic. The reason I think Judaism is kind of neat is that they have clear cut, reasoned* answers for their beliefs that most Jews adhere to, and makes religious debates a lot more fun and interesting since you've got a good set of ground rules. Christianity has so many sects and interpretations of their religious texts that it's like arguing politics. There are definitely some bigoted orthodox Jews but nobody likes talking to them :)

      --
      moox. for a new generation.
    86. Re:pig heart donors however by Hadlock · · Score: 1

      Thanks for adding to the discussion and backing your points up with links! I would mod you up if I could :) I bookmarked that wikipedia link you added.

      --
      moox. for a new generation.
    87. Re:pig heart donors however by Hadlock · · Score: 1

      I like the idea of organ donation because a) you get to be like a zombie (cool!) and b) you get to cheat death, and help someone else cheat death too :) hell yeah!
       
      Still waiting on a way to avoid taxes...

      --
      moox. for a new generation.
    88. Re:pig heart donors however by zorro-z · · Score: 1

      More breaking news: such criticisms of Judaism are an excellent *definition* of antisemitism.

      Then again, I should expect nothing else from a person whose handle is also the name of an hate group.

      --
      -Z
    89. Re:pig heart donors however by Stormwatch · · Score: 1

      I should expect nothing else from a person whose handle is also the name of an hate group.

      Ahem...

    90. Re:pig heart donors however by pydev · · Score: 1

      It wasn't Parlimentary Democracy that caused the collapse of the Wiemar Republic.

      Democratic parties were in the majority in the Weimar Republic until 1933. They could have formed a majority democratic government and excluded the Nazis from power. But because they failed to do so, Hitler was eventually appointed Chancellor with a minority government. That's what allowed him to seize power.

      The parliamentary system of the Weimar Republic, and attitudes like yours--that every splinter group should have a voice in parliament--were therefore what permitted the Nazis to seize power in Germany. If Germany had had a better parliamentary system, the horrors of WWII wouldn't have happened.

      You may want to refer to the soul crushing economic conditions.

      If a democracy can't survive bad economic times, it is not a stable democracy. US democracy certainly survived a lot of "soul crushing" problems as well, including a civil war and the Great Depression.

      Measured in representation of the views of their constituents.

      Well, like many Europeans as well, you are wrong to think that that's a good measure of how well a democracy functions. Not everybody can get their way or have their voice heard at the national political level, and history suggests that keeping fringe groups away from the national political level is a good thing.

    91. Re:pig heart donors however by GargamelSpaceman · · Score: 1

      Bedsores are when you leave someone in the same position too long, not rotating them regularly. I know for a fact they happen at all the nursing homes around here because my brother and his CNA friends ( who mostly are contractors who work at any nursing home in the area where they happen to be needed/are short staffed) have all told me stories and it's not one nursing home, it's all of them.

      --
      ...
    92. Re:pig heart donors however by GravityStar · · Score: 1

      No. Mutilation is the correct word. Just because lots of people in a country/culture think it is ok, that doesn't make it right.

      And my personal viewpoint on circumcision after birth; it's child abuse, plain and simple.

  2. Interesting by Slack0ff · · Score: 3, Interesting

    It's always a tough call when you're talking about life and death and major elective surgeries. But I find myself thinking this is a good thing, that makes sense?

    --
    Everyday You see me is the worst day of my life -Office Space
    1. Re:Interesting by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, not really.

    2. Re:Interesting by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Eye for an eye, eh (quite literally)? How different is it to cutting off the hands of shoplifters? You do something to/for me, I'll something to/for for you. If that sentiment was universal, our civilisation would disintegrate.

    3. Re:Interesting by Opportunist · · Score: 5, Insightful

      You will notice that no sensible Jew asks a doc not to perform an emergency operation during Shabbat. Saving a life trumps religious doctrines. Even according to the religious law.

      Shabbat is supposed to make you relax and reflect, it's not supposed to let you die on purpose if you happen to get sick untimely. The whole crap about "God's will" somehow didn't make it into the faith system 'til some nutjobs took it into their hands.

      You'll also notice that it's ok for Muslim to interrupt important things like Ramadan in case they get sick, it's quite ok to drink and even eat during the day when you're dehydrated and your body needs it for survival. Like Shabbat, Ramadan is supposed to make you think and reflect, to realize just how good you got it. It's not supposed to torture you for some holy reason.

      Religions originally did actually make a lot of sense. It wasn't 'til the whackos and nutcases took control of it and turned it into a tool of oppression. Granted, that happened quite quickly after their founders croaked, but I'm pretty sure if Jesus, Mohammed or ... well, whoever wrote the Pentateuch could see what became of their work, they'd be quite pissed at their successors.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    4. Re:Interesting by LingNoi · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Religions originally did actually make a lot of sense. It wasn't 'til the whackos and nutcases took control of it and turned it into a tool of oppression.

      There are two problems with this statement...

      1) Believing in a make believe sky person, for example God(s) qualifies someone as a nutcase to begin with
      2) Religion has and always will be used as a tool of oppression

      In what way does religion ever make any sense? I could tell you unicorns made the earth and I'd have as much proof as any other religion that makes similar claims.

    5. Re:Interesting by Opportunist · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Religion can actually serve a valuable purpose, especially in primitive cultures. They offer a focal point and a sense of belonging in large groups. The human nature does not allow a sensible cooperation in groups larger than twenty people. Sure, culture and "civilisation" eventually gave us a way to do it, we are today quite able to cooperate with people that do not belong to our "family and friends" group, simply because we learned to do that. Also, we have other structures built that allow us to identify "our" group, from nations to sports team colors.

      Basically religions served a sociologic purpose for early human. When you lack the technology to enforce even the most basic laws (like, say, don't kill your neighbor just 'cause he has the grub you want and you don't feel like going around the corner to the market...), you need some all-seeing all-powerful entity to keep your people in check. Sure, it won't keep everyone in line, but maybe at least a number of the guy won't go at each other's throat for a few handful of rice.

      So yes, religion isn't really a necessity anymore. We can easily replace it with technology. But it did have its place in the history of humanity, and it was quite important in forming our ability to cooperate in larger groups.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    6. Re:Interesting by c6gunner · · Score: 1

      Religion can actually serve a valuable purpose, especially in primitive cultures. They offer a focal point and a sense of belonging in large groups.

      Culture does the same thing, without requiring stupid beliefs or human sacrifice.

      The human nature does not allow a sensible cooperation in groups larger than twenty people.

      When you lack the technology to enforce even the most basic laws...

      Why in the world would you need technology to enforce laws?

    7. Re:Interesting by LingNoi · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I completely disagree with you here. What I think you're saying is that religion makes people obey the law; or something along these lines.

      That's simply not true. Most people in this world are naturally good people and want to do good deeds regardless of what they do or do not believe.

    8. Re:Interesting by Terwin · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Let's say that 80, or even 95% of people are 'good' as in they would not hurt their fellow man to further their own interests.

      That gives you that one in 20 people who would be happy to slit your throat because he wants to add your wife to his harem.

      At that point you have a number of choices.
      And until you get everyone else to agree as to what exactly should be dun about the murderer in their midsts, you can't really move forward.

      Lots of people have difficulty believing that someone they know is capable of doing terrible things.
      Add in the opportunity for that evil person to persuade those he knows to be gullible, and he can paralyze most of the community with indecision.

      On the other hand, if there is an invisible man living in the sky that says 'if an evil person does X, they must be punished by Y' then you have a set of laws that everyone feels they must follow, even if they don't like doing what they are told to do.

      If you only have a set of laws, then people will ignore them if they have had an argument with that authority, unless that authority has the power to back-up their decrees.

      Back before there was any real law, religion demanded 'en eye for an eye, and a tooth for a tooth'
      This was very harsh by our standards, but before that, vengeance and feuding would wipe out an entire family for an imagined slight.

      The religions that survive generally do so because they strengthen the society they are introduced into.
      If they weakened the society that founded them, then the religion would be wiped out with that people.
      (think about the middle Americans, like the Aztecs)

      Even now, there are lots of poorly educated people who don't believe they would get caught for committing crimes, but they know that there is that invisible man up there who WILL see them and get them for it in the end, so they don't murder their neighbors for his new shoes.
      (ever notice how many ex-gang members get out of the gang by finding god?)

      Religion can, did, and still does support civilization.

      We cannot become a truly dystopian society so long as religion still holds a strong sway.
      (we are slowly becoming more dystopian because religion is losing it's hold, but tragedies like 9/11 help push the pendulum back the other way)

    9. Re:Interesting by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      My guess is that you have not met many extremely religious people. As for nutjobs and religious founders, my guess is that you have not met many people who start their own religion. Only "nutjobs" start a new religion. It is true now, it was true a hundred years ago, and 2000 years ago, and 3000 years ago.

    10. Re:Interesting by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      And what is "good"? What defines "good" behaviour? Treat others how you want to be treated? In theory a good idea, but I'd sure as hell don't want to be in the same room as a masochist...

      Snideness aside, how do you define "being good"? To be a "good", moral human being, you first of all have to define good and moral behaviour. You would assume that it is easy to define something like that with logic and reason, unfortunately that's not necessarily something that works easily with primitive minds. Human is by natural definition an animal, a pack animal (which makes us able to cooperate in small groups), but still mostly out for its own benefit.

      The idea to do good onto others for the sake of that "warm fuzzy feeling inside" is a rather modern concept, mostly due to us fulfilling the basic levels of our need hierarchy fairly easily and thus aiming for higher goals, and altruism is a fairly common goal regarding self-esteem and respect. Yes, being altruistic gains you respect, though mostly again because our culture and society defines altruism as something noble, something to aspire to. I am fairly sure that it would be very, very different if our culture defined altruism as a sign of weakness and cowardice.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    11. Re:Interesting by Opportunist · · Score: 2, Insightful

      And how do you transport that culture? Imagine we're in 10k BC. You come down some mountain and go to your people, and you tell them "Hey folks, let's stop killing each other and cooperate, we can gain a lot more that way, instead of raiding each other's homes for sustainance, let's cultivate some crops and work together, we'll split the work, one will be a farmer, one will be a carpenter, and we'll trade the stuff amongst us, and instead of bashing each other's heads in when we want what the other one has, we'll barter..."

      If you ever tried to reason with primitive humans and get them to work together on a common goal or against a common enemy (like, say, a high school class for a school project...), you'll know that all you usually get when suggesting something like that is "Huh? Who died and made you king, asshat?"

      Though if you happen to know a bit about astronomy and point to the sky when an eclipse is about to happen and say something like "And because you don't want to work together the sky beast is now eating the sun and a lot of darkness will come to all of us, so you better fall in line and stop being primitive bastards!", the reaction will be a lot different.

      So, yes, religion does serve a purpose when it comes to introducing cultural and moral values into humans lacking any. What purpose it serves today is beyond me, but it does have its use. Or had, at least.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    12. Re:Interesting by Dog-Cow · · Score: 1

      I'd much rather people stayed honest because they believe in a God than because there is a government entity watching my, and their, every move.

    13. Re:Interesting by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      To rephrase that, I don't say it makes sense to claim there's some fluffy cloud surfer sitting atop Mount Something that makes the sun shine and the birds sing. It makes sense to use such a vehicle to instill a moral code into a society that would not accept it otherwise.

      I do agree that I would prefer to simply use logic, reason and sensible explanation to show people that cooperation is more sensible than competition. It simply does make more sense to invest your resources in making your life better than making the other one's life more miserable. It's just so tempting to take your club and bash your neighbor's head in to get the deer he hunted, it sure is easier than going hunting yourself. But if you did, your society as a whole would get weaker, and you and your neighbors would have to waste a lot of resources defending against the people around them.

      Human is mostly a "pack animal". We work great in groups of four to ten, maybe twenty, individuals that are preferably somehow genetically linked. Groups larger than that are not in our genetic makeup. So how do you, if you want to create a nation or at least a city, keep your people from going at each other's throat for their personal profit (and that of their group/clan/whatever)?

      Here it makes sense to use religion as the vehicle to give your people cohesion. When you look at religious rituals through the ages, you will notice that their primary goal was to give the congregation a focus point, something to unite them. Whether it's some bearded guy on a cloud or some heaven snake that spirals down some pyramids doesn't really matter.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    14. Re:Interesting by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      Well, if you want that you first of all need a religious population.

      Reconsider whether you really want that. History tells me it ain't a good idea if you enjoy thinking for yourself.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    15. Re:Interesting by zkp · · Score: 1

      So yes, religion isn't really a necessity anymore. We can easily replace it with technology. But it did have its place in the history of humanity, and it was quite important in forming our ability to cooperate in larger groups.

      How can technology replace it so easily? Has human nature changed that much? I don't buy it. Technology may have advanced dramatically since "primitive" times, but people are still as selfish and prone to corruption as ever.

      In the last few centuries, we have seen the printing press, great scientific advancement (calculus, physics, chemistry etc...), the computer, the internet, space travel etc. Technology has enabled massive increases in terms of food production, but the problem of poverty remains. Human trafficking is still a problem (and yes it still happens in developed countries). In the last few centuries we have also seen the atom bomb, several wars much larger than any recorded war from more "primitive" times, the holocaust etc.

      Have we become so technologically advanced that we have outgrown our need for God? I think the opposite is true. In our technologically advanced age we need God more than ever.

      I am not arguing the technology is a bad thing, it can certainly help us enforce basic laws. However, it is no replacement for God, morality or religion.

    16. Re:Interesting by c6gunner · · Score: 1

      And how do you transport that culture?

      Transport? You mean transform?

      If you really think that religion is the only way - or even a particularly effective way - of transforming a culture, then you're suffering from a paucity of both information and imagination. Kings, emperors, and generals, for starters, have historically had a lot of luck with changing cultures. So have scholars and scientists. The Enlightenment did more for the furtherance of human morality than any religion ever did.

      So, yes, religion does serve a purpose when it comes to introducing cultural and moral values into humans lacking any.

      Lacking any? I think you meant to say "lacking my particular cultural and moral values", but ended up sounding like a bigot instead. I'll assume that you don't actually believe there are human beings with no cultural and moral values at all, just because it'll make conversation easier.

      Yes, religion can sometimes change the morals and values of people - the problem is that there's no guarantee that the morals and values being introduced are any better than the preexisting ones, and may very well be worse. I don't know about you, but it seems to me that if some asshole wants to impose his own views on large populations based on lies and trickery, chances are his views and morals won't be very good.

      You do realize, don't you, that when religions "introduce moral values", they generally turn out to be negative? Greek and Roman societies were quite a bit more moral before Christianity than after. The middle-east was at one time relatively liberal and moderate - it took the invention of the Abrahamic faiths to start the real oppression and atrocities rolling.

      Can you point to ANY time period where the introduction of religion brought peace, prosperity, or the development of more liberal laws/views/attitudes? Or are you just inventing hypotheticals?

    17. Re:Interesting by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I was with you until

      We cannot become a truly dystopian society so long as religion still holds a strong sway.

      Nobody expects the Spanish Inquisition!

    18. Re:Interesting by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Uh, Mohammad raised an army and conquered his hometown of Medina after his neighbors, pre-conquest, refused in general to accept his teachings and ran him out of town. He then proceeded to conquer and create himself an empire dedicated to the spread of his new religion.

      Not all religious founders were akin to Jesus whom submitted himself to death at the hands of his detractors. Mind you with good reason, as usually such a death ended such movements.

    19. Re:Interesting by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      Religion can, did, and still does support civilization.

      We cannot become a truly dystopian society so long as religion still holds a strong sway.

      Oh, but we can. In case you didn't know, North Korean Juche is a religion, complete with a god.

      All that religion does is help maintain law & order. Which may be good, or it may be bad, depending on what kind of law and what kind of order it is.

    20. Re:Interesting by Hazelfield · · Score: 1

      Yeah, the Aztecs were totally wiped out because of their religion destabilized the society. Not because, you know, the Spaniards arrived with guns and horses and smallpox and conquered the country.

      The argument of people refraining from violence for fear of God is pretty much discredited by now. Most people act nicely towards each other because of instinct - it is programmed into our genes to cooperate with other humans. The kind of people who would murder their neighbour for a pair of new shoes lack this instinct and are impaired in their ability to see the consequences of their actions. Fear of God doesn't stop them, because they aren't ruled by reason.

    21. Re:Interesting by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      God and "morality" serve as a tool to make people behave, well, morally. To act unlike the selfish, greedy, egoistic bastards they really are. A few will overcome this greedy, selfish urges by self discipline and a personal behaviour codex, be it due to personal honor or simply because they realized that cooperation takes fewer resources than competition. The rest will fall in line when God's all seeing eye is replaced by a technologic all seeing eye...

      We're testing it currently. Let's see how it works out.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    22. Re:Interesting by Urkki · · Score: 1

      And how do you transport that culture?

      Transport? You mean transform?

      If you really think that religion is the only way - or even a particularly effective way - of transforming a culture, then you're suffering from a paucity of both information and imagination.

      Actually, when you objectively observe world and study human history, you'll come to the logical conclusion that religion is by far the most enduring and effective way to maintain a culture. Name one culture that has lasted for, say, just 500 years, which didn't have a strong religious identity, which wasn't a culture of religion.

      You could even say that current/recent religions are those that were fittest in (cultural) evolutionary sense. And they were the fittest because they survived and spread. For example some might say that religion in medieval Europe held other kind of development back, and it's even true to a degree, but looking at what happened (European nations had worldwide empires a few generations later), it certainly held Europe back less than anything anywhere else in the World (as evidenced by the fact that nothing else from anywhere in the world successfully conquered Europe ).

    23. Re:Interesting by jgostling · · Score: 1

      Having seen how fast pillaging and looting, of private homes as well as commercial establishments, came up after the Chile earthquake, I would have to strongly disagree with you. It was not until the government placed the area under military control that it did not stop.

      Cheers!

    24. Re:Interesting by c6gunner · · Score: 1

      Actually, when you objectively observe world and study human history, you'll come to the logical conclusion that religion is by far the most enduring and effective way to maintain a culture.

      This is where I start banging my head against the keyboard. You didn't just move the goalposts, you picked them up and started sprinting.

      If you had argued from the beginning that religion is the most effective way to maintain a culture, I would have probably agreed. North Korea is a shining example of what happens when you deify a ruler, and yes, their culture can probably go on indefinitely. I'm not sure why you'd think that's a good thing, though. I like my cultures to change, and change often. It keeps things fresh and interesting, instead of stagnant or regressive. However, that's all besides the point since that's not even close to what you were saying earlier. Before you try to have a conversation with others, it helps to first put together an argument in your head. Constantly changing your stance tends to annoy people.

    25. Re:Interesting by Urkki · · Score: 1

      Actually, when you objectively observe world and study human history, you'll come to the logical conclusion that religion is by far the most enduring and effective way to maintain a culture.

      This is where I start banging my head against the keyboard. You didn't just move the goalposts, you picked them up and started sprinting.

      There was talk about "transporting" culture above. Wether you take "transporting" to mean transfering to future generations, or spreading to other areas and to other people, religion is very effective at that. And along with religion, other aspects of "civilization" get "transported".

      Now I notice you talked about "transforming" and apparently mean internal change in culture, so I didn't read too carefully, my bad.

      Though I don't know if religion works against that very much either. The cultural transformation of last century has come about because of technology, and I don't see religion having slowed it down much. People like to stick to what they know, be it religion or ideology or just some sort of personal principles, and that's what slows things down, as well as "external" factors (it's pretty clear that Africa has been held back because of the mess created by colonialism in the preceding centuries, for example).

    26. Re:Interesting by c6gunner · · Score: 1

      There was talk about "transporting" culture above. Wether you take "transporting" to mean transfering to future generations, or spreading to other areas and to other people, religion is very effective at that

      I've yet to see you provide any evidence of that. And transporting and maintaining are two completely different thing, so, once again, I'll ask you to pick a point and stick to it.

      it's pretty clear that Africa has been held back because of the mess created by colonialism in the preceding centuries, for example

      I'd say Africa is being held back by the lack of colonialism, more than anything else. North and South America achieved their current level of prosperity through the success of colonialism. Africa is a mess precisely because they still largely have a tribal mentality/culture, while also having access to modern weapons and technology. I know it's unfashionable to stick up for western values and ideals, but I still have to point out that the worst places in the world are the ones where we aren't interested in getting involved.

    27. Re:Interesting by deek · · Score: 1

      You speak as if all people have moved past their primitive selves. That's not the case. We are all primitive in some way. And that's not a bad thing.

      In any case, there's still a place for religion in the modern world. Religion itself is not bad. It's when it is taken advantage of by people pushing a bad agenda, that it can become a problem. But then again, you can say that about many non-religious organisations as well.

      I don't mind religion. It can have a very positive effect on people. Sure, it requires that you believe in things that have no proof. Everyone does that anyway, no matter how "rational" you believe you are. When was the last time you sincerely believed in something, without conclusive proof to back you up?

    28. Re:Interesting by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      Erh... no.

      North America became a full blown European colony rather than a "strip clean and dump" one like Africa. We didn't just invade there, we settled with the plan to stay. We shipped people there who became rooted in the "new world", to the point that they severed the ties with their country of origin and formed a country of their own. It's not like we "civilized" the natives and gave them independence so they could become prosperous. The US, and all the other "successful" colonies are actually run by Europeans who managed to push out the original settlers, with North America and Australia being the showcase examples.

      Everywhere else we came and pulled their pants down. Either we just forced them to hand over their valuables or we even exported/imported them as slaves. There has never been some "real" settlement sentiments amongst the colonial lords of Africa or India. There was no feeling of belonging there, the viceroys and governors ruled for their home country, with their home country's benefit in mind, not the colony's.

      That's the core difference between Africa and America. We stripped them of their culture and heritage, instilled the feeling of inferiority and left them with a lot of debt on their back, and now we're just making sure they cannot repay it. We're still holding colonies there. It's just that we noticed it's much cheaper to keep them busy fighting each other, that way we needn't whip them to dig out their resources for us, they'll willingly hand them over to pay for our guns.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    29. Re:Interesting by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      I'd consider it very, very sad if we have like 10 millenia of civilisation to look back at and still need religion to stay away from each other's throat. My hope was that human is, at least to some part, able to see past the "gimmegimmegimme" attitude of a mere animal and see the benefit of "live and let live", the benefit of cooperation.

      And yes, I believe a lot of things without proof. For example, I believe in black holes and that they don't let light escape. I haven't seen it. I have not verified it. I believe in science and the people propagating it. So yes, you might say I'm a blind follower of some set of beliefs.

      But I could go and test mine, provided I have the skill and equipment. It's a bit like OSS. I can go and read the source to verify that there's not a hidden payload in the code, I can compile it myself and make sure that it's 'clean' if I don't want to put my faith in the author. Provided I have skill and equipment to do so, that is.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    30. Re:Interesting by LuNa7ic · · Score: 1

      Really? Do you live in some wonderful happy secret land, or do you just live with your head in the clouds? In my experience, most people live by greedy impulse and make behavioural decisions based on the the perceived chance of avoiding unwanted consequences for their actions.

      --
      *runs*
    31. Re:Interesting by deek · · Score: 1

      A "mere" animal, you say. Not all animals have a complete "gimme" attitude. In fact, I don't know of any that do. They generally live in a harmonious balance, with varying degrees of give and take. It is homo sapiens that has taken the most, of any of the animal species.

      People are animals. We have animalistic instincts, we have emotions, and we follow them. People are also sentient and rational. We have to accept these different parts of ourselves, and learn how we can behave so they are not conflicted. Religion can help in this regard.

      From a rational viewpoint, I view religion as a tool. It is useful and effective in what it does. If we're still using it in another few millennia, it is because we still need it. There's nothing sad about it.

      Throughout life, you have to decide what you trust in. Even the greatest sceptic must do so. Nobody can survive without trusting something to a certain degree. People that follow religion have just established their trust point at that level. They believe, without proof, and without the possibility of proof. That's their personal decision, and it's not a bad thing. It's only bad when the trust is abused, and used for personal gain, or against others.

      You could compile your own code, if you don't trust the binary. But, you would still have to place your trust in the compiler.

  3. Hey guise by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Insightful

    Religion is awesome is it not?

    1. Re:Hey guise by IICV · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Yeah, I don't understand this. Their religion comes from a time when cutting-edge surgery involved a dull axe, some grain alcohol (to get the surgeon's courage up) and maybe some hot tar if you were lucky. How can they possibly justify applying a book written by a bunch of shepherds and nomads to something as modern as organ transplantation?

      And if they think that God intended for His holy book to say something about organ transplants, wouldn't it be right there where it's obvious (like say in the ten commandments), and not hidden away in some obscure little passage?

    2. Re:Hey guise by MichaelSmith · · Score: 1

      Traffic signals close to Synagogues in my city run automatic pedestrian movements on Saturdays because people walking to the Synagogue won't press the button.

      Joseph Guttnick wouldn't watch the football on Saturday but he did hire non-jewish security guards to watch it for him.

    3. Re:Hey guise by Runaway1956 · · Score: 1

      Maybe you have something of a point - and maybe you don't. I mean, the Greeks were doing brain surgery way back when. There was commerce in the region way back when. Which is older - Judaism, Greece, or commerce? I mean, it's not like Moses, Methuselah, and all the other prophets were neanderthals, or cave men, or whatever. Not to mention that all those famous libraries that were destroyed by good Christian crusaders. We really don't know what the level of medical learning was in the region 5000 years ago.
      You insist that they had no medical know-how? Well - there is evidence that they had engineering skills in Egypt that we can't equal today. Try hiring a construction firm to build some of those pyramids. Go for it.
      Some of those historic and prehistoric people were a lot smarter than most people give them credit for.

      --
      "Windows is like the faint smell of piss in a subway: it's there, and there's nothing you can do about it." - Charlie Br
    4. Re:Hey guise by Opportunist · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Wouldn't that be like circumventing the law?

      Folks, God's laws ain't like the human kind. They aren't meant to be searched for loopholes. Either keep them or just ignore them altogether, there's no reason to dance around them. If you think God exists, then you should know that God ain't a judge who'll mutter under his breath when he acquits you on a technicality because you happened to find a loophole. He'll be pissed, first that you broke the law, second that you did so while smugly telling him that you're upholding it.

      Think he'll like that? And think he'll follow due process and all the crap that came way after he invented the whole deal? Hmm?

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    5. Re:Hey guise by ars · · Score: 5, Informative

      I posted this before, but here it is again:

      Jews do not believe it's wrong to donate. What they believe is that, as long as a persons heart is beating they are alive.

      Meaning: They believe it's wrong to murder someone to harvest organs.

      Others believe that after brain death the person is dead, and it's not murder.

      The argument is not over organ donation, which even the strictest rabbi agrees with.

      The argument is over the definition of death, since most organ donation are done after brain, but not cardiac, death.

      --
      -Ariel
    6. Re:Hey guise by Ceriel+Nosforit · · Score: 1

      How can they possibly justify applying a book written by a bunch of shepherds and nomads to something as modern as organ transplantation?

      It's because

      A. Their god doesn't talk to them anymore
      B. They don't listen
      C. Nietzsche killed him

      It's fairly easy to work oneself into a state of exctacy where the idle chatter of one's mind sounds so concentrated it has to be the voice of god. But since all preachers are so enamoured with their own voice and the simili of power that their interpretations of scripture grants them, when it comes to listening to the voice of their conscience for moral guidance they expect that voice to be as loud and intolerant as their own.

      The techniques for trance, extacy and so on used to be the closely guarded secrets of priesthoods since these were also the basis of their power. Today however if you are able to filter out the New Age BS from the ancient shamanistic practices you too can commune with nature, 'talk with god', and achieve concentration so deep that you're unable to differentiate between yourself and the focus of your mind.
      Clearly the Abrahamic tradition didn't get the memo, or their preachers would be instructing people in these internal arts rather than puff themselves full of air like the Rabbis behind this brain-fart.

      --
      All rites reversed 2010
    7. Re:Hey guise by TheLink · · Score: 2, Informative

      > Well - there is evidence that they had engineering skills in Egypt that we can't equal today.
      > Try hiring a construction firm to build some of those pyramids. Go for it.

      They'll laugh at you, not because they can't build them. But because you're not going to be able to afford it.

      You're not the Pharaoh after all - the supreme absolute ruler of the nation.

      Or Bill Gates or any of those extremely rich billionaires (who'd have the $$$ for it, but they clearly have different priorities).

      A Nimitz class aircraft carrier is pretty much in the same order of magnitude in size, and far more complicated and sophisticated.

      --
    8. Re:Hey guise by Runaway1956 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      You actually need to check on what you're talking about. Seriously. There are at least two documentaries "out there" somewhere, in which today's modern engineering big shots have voiced opinions that they couldn't build a pyramid in the time frame in which the various pyramids were built. Not for any amount of money. Using the methods commonly used in building our modern skyscrapers, they couldn't move those huge blocks of stone from the bottom to the top. I won't swear to it, but I believe that one of those documentaries was done by the Discovery channel.

      Oh, they could build a pyramid SIMILAR to those in Egypt - using concrete. But, they can't move those huge stones, as the Egyptians did.

      Can YOU come up with a method of moving those tons of rock, that doesn't require electricity, or gasoline or diesel power?

      There is at least one guy on the internet who thinks he has solved the problem. In his case, money might be the problem in building a pyramid on a grand scale. The rest? They don't have the skills, or even the knowledge needed to build those skills.

      Much lesser feats of engineering have baffled out best minds for years. Another documentary was running on Discovery or History channel several months ago, in which some people attempted to match one of the Caesar's crossing of one river or another. Those Romans moved an entire army across a river between dusk and dawn, and our people today worked on the problem of building that bridge within such a short time frame for YEARS.

      So much knowledge was lost during the dark ages, and the subsequent crusades.

      --
      "Windows is like the faint smell of piss in a subway: it's there, and there's nothing you can do about it." - Charlie Br
    9. Re:Hey guise by TeknoHog · · Score: 1

      a time when cutting-edge surgery involved a dull axe

      Wait, what? I don't think it's even bleeding edge.

      --
      Escher was the first MC and Giger invented the HR department.
    10. Re:Hey guise by ShadowRangerRIT · · Score: 1

      Judaism disagrees with you. God's intentions are not known, so a great deal of interpretation has to go into it. Since many of the rules apply only to Jews, as long as the rule breaking is done by Gentiles (generation of power and all that), all is well. Keep in mind, to even identify the use of electricity as a violation of the law required interpretation (what with electricity not being a factor in the Torah). So they expanded the rule to cover something not found in the Torah just in case, but interpreted what constitutes use in a way that doesn't render you a shut-in from sundown Friday to sundown Saturday.

      --
      $_ = "wftedskaebjgdpjgidbsmnjgcdwatb"; tr/a-z/oh, turtleneck Phrase Jar!/; print
    11. Re:Hey guise by Toze · · Score: 1

      Let's do an experiment. Send you 100 years into the future, where they've decided that because of a new technology, your moral code doesn't apply anymore... saaaaaay, they've invented personality uploading and cloning. And since everyone backs up weekly, murder is now considered mere property damage. But you, with your ancient codes of conduct, object, because you don't trust the backups to not be tampered with, and you're not keen on dying even though "you won't remember."

      "Piffle" says futureman, "your ancient and obtuse ways of thinking are no longer valid in today's advanced world. In your time, brain surgery was barely more than trepaniation. It's not really a question of life and death, just property rights. Here, let me show you." And he pulls out a gun and shoots you.

      My point being that just as new things are neither bad nor good because they are new, old things are neither bad nor good because they are old. "Don't kill people arbitrarily" is a good idea, even though it's old, and while "the heart is still pumping" might be an outdated method of tracking liveliness, the idea of waiting until someone's "dead" before pulling their organs out is a good one. If you'll recall, the US Constitution was written by a bunch of tobacco farmers and hayseeds generations ago- but the concepts written down in it are still useful, n'est-ce pas?

      --
      No OS on the planet can protect itself from a user with the admin password. - Yvan256
    12. Re:Hey guise by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's also quite possible that the ancient documents describing some events were ... slightly generous ... in order to make the particular subject look like they did something awesome, when in fact they could have done something only marginally cool and then told everyone to lie about it.

    13. Re:Hey guise by IICV · · Score: 2, Insightful

      There are at least two documentaries "out there" somewhere, in which today's modern engineering big shots have voiced opinions that they couldn't build a pyramid in the time frame in which the various pyramids were built.

      You know why? Because we don't have slaves any more. What they mean is "with modern safety standards, we couldn't build the pyramids". If you told them "Okay, here's two thousand people, you're allowed to kill ten men for every 20 meters in height", they'd be all "so where do I sign on?"

    14. Re:Hey guise by ericspinder · · Score: 1

      Organ donation can be a form of self sacrifice, not unlike falling on a grenade, or rushing into a suicide bomber. Surely, observant Jews don't condemn those people, why should organ donation be any different?

      --
      The grass is only greener, if you don't take care of your own lawn.
    15. Re:Hey guise by Eskarel · · Score: 1

      I actually saw a documentary where they did it with just period tools, they didn't build an entire one, as I recall they basically just did about 4 levels of the top of one, but if you can move 20 gigantic stone blocks with a dozen or so people, you can move a few thousand with a few thousand people, it'd take a long time the first few times, but the Egyptians didn't start with Giza either.

      We could build a pyramid today, but they'd have to build specialty machines. Modern cranes aren't designed to move a multi-tonne stone block. Developing those machines would be crazy expensive I'd guess you'd burn at least a few million bucks and a decade or so just getting the thing together, which would basically make doing it infeasible. That's not the same thing as impossible though, and the fact that you couldn't just rock up with modern equipment and build one doesn't mean they could do things we can't. That'd be like saying that because our soldiers wouldn't be all that gooda t fighting with a spear from a chariot that the ancient Egyptians could beat us in battle, that like building pyramids, just isn't something we do these days.

      That's not to say stuff hasn't been lost, reasonable evidence indicates that Damascus steel was what we'd call carbon steel today and it took about 500 years for us to rediscover that when it was lost, and I'm sure there are other things. The pyramids

    16. Re:Hey guise by Sir_Lewk · · Score: 1

      If we were willing to use slave labor and were not concerned with a good number of them being worked to death, we could do it no problem. Don't confuse barbarism with skill or ingenuity.

      --
      "linux is just DOS with a UNIX like syntax" -- Galactic Dominator (944134)
    17. Re:Hey guise by Dog-Cow · · Score: 1

      You don't know the first thing about Judaism's view on organ transplantation. You also don't know the first thing on how Jewish law is formulated.

    18. Re:Hey guise by IICV · · Score: 1

      Apparently not all Jews define death as "when the heart stops beating"; it seems to be only a small yet oddly vocal minority.

    19. Re:Hey guise by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So using a Heart-Lung machine (and stopping the heart) is murder? I'm curious.

    20. Re:Hey guise by IICV · · Score: 1

      Actually, I would expect the futureman to respect my beliefs and not try to force his modern culture on me (and hence not shoot me, and if I do die not revive me); however, I would extend that same respect to the futureman: I would not try to block legislation that would, for instance, move psyche-donors to the top of the mental apparatus transplant lists because I believe such things to be against my ancient New Reformed Spaghettheology beliefs. I wouldn't try to change the education standards of the era to only teach my cherished but now known to be wrong Relativity and Quantum Mechanics, instead of their shiny new Grand Unified Theory. I wouldn't try to deny people the right to genetically screen their potential children, in order to avoid the pain and hardship of raising children with gross physical and mental deformities.

      Unfortunately, we have our own transplants from a thousand years ago who are right now trying to accomplish the equivalent of these very things.

    21. Re:Hey guise by Myopic · · Score: 1

      Can YOU come up with a method of moving those tons of rock, that doesn't require electricity, or gasoline or diesel power?

      I haven't thought very hard about it, but I'd get all my friends together and push it really hard, probably while it is on rollers, and hopefully up a ramp. If that didn't work, then I'd think about it a little longer and probably come up with another idea.

    22. Re:Hey guise by Myopic · · Score: 1

      That makes logical sense, but there is Egyptian science from the last decade or so which shows pretty conclusively that the workers weren't slaves, they were paid laborers. In any case, slaves or not, the evidence supports the theory of combined human might as the power source.

    23. Re:Hey guise by ISoldat53 · · Score: 1

      It keeps the religion profession going.

    24. Re:Hey guise by IICV · · Score: 1

      So? Just because they were paid laborers doesn't mean the worker attrition rate wasn't horrific. People are willing to endure a whole lot of shit for their daily bread. Further, just because they were paid doesn't mean they weren't effectively slaves - after all, if you're not going to work on the Pyramid, what else are you going to do? None of the rice paddies need unskilled labor, the Pharoah is pre-empting all other construction projects for his great endeavor, and where else are you going to get health insurance if you don't work for him?

      Wait sorry I was channeling modern day America for a moment there. Anyway, even though you may be paid, you're still a slave if your only choices are "take this job" or "starve and die".

    25. Re:Hey guise by jpmorgan · · Score: 1

      You're an idiot. Seriously. Turn off the TV and think about the problem for a minute.

      First, no without gasoline, electricity or diesel power we probably couldn't build the pyramids in the same time frame. Because we don't have an army of slaves.

      But the pyramids are structurally simple. And we DO have gasoline, electricity and diesel power. Hell, we have construction equipment BIGGER than the pyramids. How long do you seriously think it would take a large tower crane to position a stone? It doesn't even have to be precise, by modern standards. One guy in the tower, a few guys on the ground, they could probably place a couple of stones an hour once everybody got used to it.

      It took absolute monarchs decades to build each pyramid; if money was no object you could have one built today in about a year. We don't build new pyramids because we can't figure out how. How is easy. We don't build pyramids because nobody wants one.

      If you still don't believe you're an idiot, google 'Dubai artificial islands.'

    26. Re:Hey guise by TheLink · · Score: 1

      I somewhat concede your point "Well - there is evidence that they had engineering skills in Egypt that we can't equal today.", assuming you mean we can't do things exactly the way they did, or don't know how they did some things.

      But that doesn't mean we can't build a pyramid. We just can't do it using the exact same methods the Egyptians did (since we don't know exactly what they did thousands of years ago).

      There are some interesting theories though: http://www.livescience.com/history/070518_bts_barsoum_pyramids.html
      And some arguments against it (of course :) ): http://www.cmc-concrete.com/CMC%20Publications/2007,%20The%20Great%20Pyramid%20Debate,%2029th%20ICMA.pdf

      Building a pyramid is a fairly parallelizable problem. Once you are willing and able to throw enough resources at the problem the issues become more of project management and logistics, than technology.

      To me building a nuclear powered aircraft carrier is a far more difficult problem. It involves relatively high level mastery of far more different technologies, sciences and methods (in addition to project management etc).

      > Can YOU come up with a method of moving those tons of rock, that doesn't require electricity, or gasoline or diesel power?

      A modern construction firm would prefer to use electricity, gasoline or diesel.

      That said, there are lots of Bangladeshis breaking up ships using human power (google for it ). So if you give me enough money (upfront) and reasonable time, perhaps I can convince them and others to build a pyramid. Then with your generosity, I can provide them with far better living and working conditions than what they are experiencing daily, and a better salary too.

      I assume one would be allowed to initially transport the workers from Bangladesh, India etc to the building area using modern tech ;).

      --
    27. Re:Hey guise by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually, mainstream Jewish theology holds that we are allowed to look for loopholes in the laws of the Torah, so long as certain rules of interpretation are followed. http://lookstein.org/retrieve.php?ID=1639920 . There is a story in the Talmud in Bava Metzia 59B that illustrates the point.

      The Rabbis were engaged in a halakhic discussion over whether an oven that had become ritually impure could be purified. While almost all the sages felt it couldn't be, Rabbi Eliezer, a lone voice but a great scholar, disagreed:

              "On that day, Rabbi Eliezer put forward all the arguments in the world, but the Sages did not accept them.

              "Finally, he said to them, 'If the halakha is according to me, let that carobtree prove it.'

              "He pointed to a nearby carob-tree, which then moved from its place a hundred cubits, and some say, four hundred cubits. They said to him 'One cannot bring a proof from the moving of a carob-tree.'

              "Said Rabbi Eliezer, 'If the halakha is according to me, may that stream of water prove it.'

              "The stream of water then turned and flowed in the opposite direction.

              "They said to him, 'One cannot bring a proof from the behavior of a stream of water.'

              "Said Rabbi Eliezer, 'If the halakha is according to me, may the walls of the House of Study prove it.'

              "The walls of the House of Study began to bend inward. Rabbi Joshua then rose up and rebuked the walls of the House of Study, 'If the students of the Wise argue with one another in halakha," he said, "what right have you to interfere?'

              "In honor of Rabbi Joshua, the walls ceased to bend inward; but in honor of Rabbi Eliezer, they did not straighten up, and they remain bent to this day.

              "Then, said Rabbi Eliezer to the Sages, 'If the halakha is according to me, may a proof come from Heaven.'

              "Then a heavenly voice went forth and said, 'What have you to do with Rabbi Eliezer? The halakha is according to him in every place.'

              "Then Rabbi Joshua rose up on his feet, and said, 'It is not in the heavens' (Deuteronomy 30:12).

              "What did he mean by quoting this? Said Rabbi Jeremiah, 'He meant that since the Torah has been given already on Mount Sinai, we do not pay attention to a heavenly voice, for You have written in Your Torah, 'Decide according to the majority' (Exodus 23:2).

              "Rabbi Nathan met the prophet Elijah. He asked him, 'What was the Holy One, Blessed be He, doing in that hour?'

              "Said Elijah, 'He was laughing and saying, "My children have defeated me, my children have defeated me.""'

    28. Re:Hey guise by asaz989 · · Score: 1

      Are you kidding? Us Jews have a nice little story about how proud G-d was when we finally out-argued him on the fine points of His law. (look up the Oven of Akhnai if you're interested in the pretty hilarious details).

    29. Re:Hey guise by kabloom · · Score: 1

      The Jews who define death as "when the heart stops beating" are hardly a small minority. Ha'aretz has an article detailing the history of the dispute in Israel.

      On one side of the dispute, Rabbi Ovadia Yosef (the leader of Sephardic jewry, a group which comprises about half of the religious Jews in Israel) has ruled that according to Jewish law a person is considered dead at the time brain stem activity ceases.

      On the other side of the dispute, Rabbi Yosef Shalom Elyashiv (the leader of Lithuanian jewry, also a very significant group in Israel, though I suspect it's smaller than the Sephardic jews) has ruled that according to Jewish law a person is considered dead when the heart stops beating.

      It's also important to note that Israel has no requirement that the Chief Rabbinate agree to a bill in order for it to pass or become law. Israel's government is a secular parliamentary democracy (structured similarly to many European governments), and the Knesset (parliament) has unlimited legislating authority, without even the limitations or checks and balances provided by a written constitution. However becuase of the large population of religious Jews in Israel, it's good politics to listen to consider what their religious authorities have to say when drafting laws that may be affected by Jewish law.

    30. Re:Hey guise by kabloom · · Score: 1

      And CPR is ressurection? I think not.

      I'm pretty sure I remember hearing that according to these rabbis, death occurs when the heart stops and can't be restarted.

    31. Re:Hey guise by ars · · Score: 1

      The subject of self sacrifice is very very complicated. There is no settled answer - it varies by circumstance.

      But basically it is prohibited if you are certain you are going to die. Risking your life on the other hand is quite different. Intent matters more than probability here.

      However if someone did do it, they are not condemned, as you say. But that's not the same as saying they are allowed to do it.

      And certainly you can not help kill someone.

      --
      -Ariel
    32. Re:Hey guise by Myopic · · Score: 1

      To be clear, I'm not disagreeing with your point. Great point, old chap. I'm not trying to have an argument.

      I just wanted to salt the conversation with a some recent scholarship, which (apparently) shows that not only were the laborers paid, and not slaves, but enjoyed better-than-average nutrition (ie, they ate well, including meat -- a fact that apparently modern science can establish), and drank alcohol. This is merely an interesting side-note to the topic of building pyramids, given the popular belief that slaves built the pyramid. (Moreover, the laborers were not Jewish, another popular belief.)

    33. Re:Hey guise by Artifakt · · Score: 1

      I'm pretty sure here were no libraries destroyed by Christian crusaders 5,000 years ago. In fact, I'd venture to say that Christians had no impact at all, for good or ill, on the state of medicine in the middle east 5,000 years ago.
            It seems like a safe bet that some Muslim libraries in the region were destroyed by the Crusaders roughly 1,0000 to 1,100 years ago, and it's a well known historical fact that Christian Not-Crusaders destroyed the library of Alexandria about 700 years before that.
            With enough digging, I was able to find historical references to a few Jewish libraries that were looted and/or burned by one or the other side during the crusades. The incidents are not very well known compared to the destruction of the great Alexandrian library or anything else like it. It's pretty doubtful they resulted in the complete loss of any major works on medicine, as most of those types of books were sold to rich people in Europe, who hoped to learn alchemical secrets for living forever, rather than being burned.
            I'm not saying it's totally impossible that there were medical theories well in advance of what we think people in the region knew then, and they were somehow all lost. But, to make it even vaguely probable, you're conflating events that lie hundreds or thousands of years apart, and ignoring significant differences (i.e. most Muslim works on medicine existed as primary copies in parts of the empire no Christian looting ever reached, and there were dozens of copies known to have survived. While the crusaders did reach all parts of what was once the Jewish controlled portion, again dozens or hundreds of copies of the known works still existed after they left. There would have to be some mysterious book, and it and its author would have to not be mentioned in any of the books that survived to even hint at its existence, and the Crusaders would have had to do a much more thorough job of destruction than history suggests they did, and so on...). It's simply not at all likely.

      --
      Who is John Cabal?
    34. Re:Hey guise by Toze · · Score: 1

      Actually, I would expect the futureman to respect my beliefs and not try to force his modern culture on me

      You'll note how well that worked for Africa between, say, 1600 and 1900.

      I would not try to block legislation that would,

      Yes, but let's pick something you disagree with on a fundamental moral level- say, (let's presume you favour pro-choice) the futuremen think that abortion is a social wrong, and ban it. You wouldn't lobby to get that law changed? Or a law that says, since murder is property damage, rape is merely vandalism?

      If you disagree with the views of a culture or subculture, I have no qualms. If you object to the influence they're having in politics as free agents in a democratic state, as long as they're allowed to speak, I have no qualms. But you seem to have objected to the rabbis' arguments on the basis of the tech level of their core books, not any particular ethical or logical element. I assume you don't disagree with the parts of their books you like, like "don't murder people" and "treat people well-" yet those parts come from the same era as the parts you object to.

      What I mean to say is, you seem to be making the argument (in this and the other post I replied to) that being later in time, being scientifically advanced, and having a better grasp of ethics all go together. I don't imagine you mean to say that, since our internet-using society seems to manage plenty of evils, intolerance, and race camps despite having way more jet planes than Stalin or Hitler did.* You disagree with the rabbis, obviously, but why? Your argument is unclear to me.

      *Not a Godwin. Not comparing you to Hitler. Just pointing out the disconnection between time, science, and ethics. See also the reduction in European learning between, e.g., 1250 and 1400.

      Please note- I also disagree with the rabbis' interpretations of the state of death, and I think donors jumping the queue is a good idea. I think the rabbis are making the same kind of reading error that more recent groups have made about blood donations- being awfully literal about some passages that may not bear it well. But I don't disagree with them because their beliefs are old.

      --
      No OS on the planet can protect itself from a user with the admin password. - Yvan256
    35. Re:Hey guise by LordVader717 · · Score: 1

      I mean, it's not like Moses, Methuselah, and all the other prophets were neanderthals, or cave men, or whatever.

      Actually, if you believe the dates they give you in the Bible, they pretty much were. Modern archaeology has a pretty good understanding of how and which civilizations developed over time. According to the Moses was in a nomadic culture in the middle Bronze Age. That's pretty basic.
      Noah by the way was a bronzeage engineer who built a giant cargo ship made of wood. :-)

      Don't base your understanding of history on Mythological texts. Nothing irks me more than when people take images from Charlton Heston movies and picture books and think they're historic.

  4. It actually makes sense by Cryacin · · Score: 1

    Seriously. I'll give you mine if you give me yours.*

    * In the event of spectacular untimely demise.

    --
    Science advances one funeral at a time- Max Planck
    1. Re:It actually makes sense by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Yes, well, however, suitable donors make very unlikely receivers (or is it "acceptors"?). Everyone with family history of illness for which a transplantation is indicated will be compelled to enlist, so the donor list would be filled with "donors" who are more likely to need an organ then to be a source of one. The net worth of such a list would be negative, it would be next to useless.

      Hopefully one day we will be able to predict and prevent or heal the causes that lead to necessity of organ transplantation. This is inherently encumbered with problems.

    2. Re:It actually makes sense by Jurily · · Score: 1

      predict

      Yeah, there's a good idea. Like insurance companies don't make enough profit yet, nevermind the social consequences.

    3. Re:It actually makes sense by 0123456789 · · Score: 1

      Yes, well, however, suitable donors make very unlikely receivers (or is it "acceptors"?).

      Is that true? I can certainly believe it for a single organ ("suitable heart donors make very unlikely heart receivers"), but I would expect that at least some of the other organs would be viable in most cases?

    4. Re:It actually makes sense by Sparr0 · · Score: 1

      Can you elaborate on any reasoning or statistical high-probability linkage between needing a heart transplant and having transplant-worthy eyes / kidneys / etc?

    5. Re:It actually makes sense by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, it isn't. For some reason,you don't have to know what you are talking about to post on slashdot.

    6. Re:It actually makes sense by Dare+nMc · · Score: 1

      I don't agree with the GP, but some things, like kidney disease can destroy other organs, like the eyes. Also things like AIDS would increase the likelihood of the need for a transplant and rule out being a donor. But it definitely seams fair to me, if something in your religion is causing a shortage, it is good to challenge that beliefs harm to society in this manner.

    7. Re:It actually makes sense by virtualXTC · · Score: 1

      modded from AC to +3 Insightful? ...apparently M2 isn't working because there are certainly a lot of ass-hats with mod points these days!

      If the parent had any insight he'd realize that bad kidneys != bad heart; bad heart != bad liver; bad liver != bad bone marrow, etc. etc. etc....

    8. Re:It actually makes sense by rdnetto · · Score: 1

      Even if a family history of illness is a significant factor, you're also assuming that said illness will make *all* organs unsuitable for transplants. That may be the case for some illnesses, but I highly doubt that it's the case for the majority.

      --
      Most human behaviour can be explained in terms of identity.
  5. Never even thought about it by OrwellianLurker · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I've been an organ donor since I got my license when I was sixteen. I never really considered that people who WERE NOT organ donors would receive the same treatment in regards to their placement on the the list of people in need of an organ transplant. Total bullshit.

    --
    'Political power grows out of the barrel of a gun.' - Mao Tse-tung
    1. Re:Never even thought about it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Being an organ donor is an unselfish thing to do. I personally would recommend it... However to play the devils advocate..

      Organs are huge $$$ you never know if doctors would be less willing to try and save your ass from dieing by prematurely transitioning into organ harvesting mode. (Brrraaaiinnnnsssss!!)

      Recommend when making a decision on wether to be a donor you at least fully understand the state of play WRT political and economic pressures involved in your local region. In some parts of the world your response if you even have a choice should be *HELL NO*

    2. Re:Never even thought about it by icebraining · · Score: 1, Flamebait

      The very fact that your doctors can receive money for your organs shows a flawed system.

    3. Re:Never even thought about it by Third+Position · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Organs are huge $$$ you never know if doctors would be less willing to try and save your ass from dieing by prematurely transitioning into organ harvesting mode. (Brrraaaiinnnnsssss!!)

      Yes. Which is particularly salient since we're talking about Israel.

      --
      American Third Position
      Finally, a real choice!
    4. Re:Never even thought about it by Mr.+Freeman · · Score: 1

      They don't. The anon. coward is talking nonsense. Doctors have NO incentive to harvest your organs.

      In fact, they'd have an incentive to keep you alive. After all, the more drugs they give you, the more time you spend in the hospital, the more care you receive, the more you (or insurance) pay. It's pretty hard to bill a dead guy. Even if they don't make any more money, their percentages (% of people saved vs. died) would suffer if they let a patient slip, which would make them look like a poor doctor.

      --
      -1 disagree is not a modifier for a reason. -1 troll, flaimbait, redundant, overrated are NOT acceptable substitutes.
    5. Re:Never even thought about it by JustOK · · Score: 1

      you're not an organ donor YET.

      --
      rewriting history since 2109
    6. Re:Never even thought about it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      From what I've heard, when one is on the organ donor list, doctors may not be especially reverent with ones remains. This isn't a problem when your body is just a bag of useless bones and organs that might as well be harvested and used to keep other people alive (gee, it sounds rather barbaric when I put it that way...), so I don't indicate "organ donor" however, in the event of my untimely demise, my family is free to determine whether my organs may be donated. I've been thinking about leaving specific instructions, but I've hesitated because it's a bit morbid to say to one's parents, "if I meet an untimely fate, I want my healthy organs donated." Anyway, my religion (Orthodox Christianity) does things a little differently as far as burial, which makes the usual organ donation indication on the driver's license difficult. However, it doesn't bar us from donating organs

    7. Re:Never even thought about it by hairyfeet · · Score: 1

      But you gotta think about the average Doc's God complex as well. Let me give you a scenario: Here your average 40 year old butt is in a car wreck and could go either way. Your life has been nothing but average, no kids or wife, just an average Joe. Then on the other hand here is little Suzy...isn't she cute? Little Suzy is a 19 year old honor student, just as sweet as can be and cute as all get out, hell everybody loves little Suzy, but if she don't get an organ but quick little Suzy is toast.

      See the problem? It all comes down to a judgment call, and whose life I as the doc decide is worth more, your boring average ass or the sweet little perfect honor student. You can't just think completely rational about things such as this, or else old Steve Jobs wouldn't have gotten an organ with him having cancer, now would he? Or old Larry Hagman wouldn't have gotten a new liver after he drank his original one away. If the program was strictly rational celebrity wouldn't play any part in it, and neither would be here, yet they are. Something you might want to think about before you poo poo the other guy.

      --
      ACs don't waste your time replying, your posts are never seen by me.
    8. Re:Never even thought about it by Cidolfas · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I know 3 MDs, about a dozen med students in various years, and way too many pre-med undergrads. All of them would be stuck livid at the notion that they would purposefully let a patient go so they could harvest the organs to save another. It's jut not in their mindset - they might not be super jaded yet, but they try to save anybody, anytime. That's how they're wired.

      --
      I am become /dev/null, destroyer of data.
    9. Re:Never even thought about it by priegog · · Score: 5, Informative

      I don't know whether the laws over there (I'm european) are so screwed up that doctors would actually get to choose wheter to harvest someone's organs or not, but I really hope you've got it all completely wrong. In my country, the law says that EVERYONE is an organ donor unless you actively opt-out. Families do get to refuse, I think. But the point is no doctors' god complex will have ANYTHING to do with it (I'm a doctor BTW, you insensitive clod!). And even on the RARE cases that fall in a legal grey area, the hospital's ethics commitee will be summoned to discuss the matter and come up with the best possible solution for all parties involved. I don't know wether there a single doctor has the legal power to make such decisions (and if they do, wether they actually use that power), but that kind of worries me. Needless to say, with everyone being a potential donor, we aren't nearly as organ-lacking over here are you seem to be over there. By the way, the organs waiting list system over here IS strictly rational, taking into consideration every possible little thing you could ever think of. So when a person who drank his way up to almost death get a new liver, you can be absolutely sure that he didn't deprive a "more deserving" person of a liver. Again, this might also be possible due to there being more organs available.

    10. Re:Never even thought about it by demonlapin · · Score: 5, Insightful

      You know, if transplant surgeons took trauma cases, and all organs were universally compatible, and physicians liked getting sued, that might bear some tiny resemblance to an actual moral dilemma. But none of those is the case.

    11. Re:Never even thought about it by c6gunner · · Score: 1

      Well put :) Where do these people get these ideas??

    12. Re:Never even thought about it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I am not sure which country you are talking about, but I have seen how it works in one of the 1st world countries, with similar rules:

      a) family always can refuse donation (even though they do not actually have the right, is just hospital's good will)
      b) family usually does refuse, due to lack of education, mostly, and some witch-hunt going on earlier

      and

      c) if you are any doctor's family, you get bumped up the line... waayy up the line. Or even let in the line in the first place, when normal folk would be rejected (due to age, etc)

      And yup, it's all first hand experience...

    13. Re:Never even thought about it by demonlapin · · Score: 1

      TV, where surgeons 1) are the only physicians in the hospital and are responsible for care of all patients, and 2) operate on appendices one day, bones the next, and brains the day after that.

    14. Re:Never even thought about it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So the question is, was Steve Jobs a donor before he jumped the queue?

    15. Re:Never even thought about it by Eskarel · · Score: 1

      Personally I never really bothered with the sticker as it doesn't really mean anything. The ultimate decision in the US(and here in Australia) lies with your family, unless you don't have next of kin, whether or not you have the sticker really means a whole lot of nothing, your family can overrule your decision either way.

    16. Re:Never even thought about it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I know 3 MDs, about a dozen med students in various years, and way too many pre-med undergrads. All of them would be stuck livid at the notion that they would purposefully let a patient go so they could harvest the organs to save another. It's jut not in their mindset - they might not be super jaded yet, but they try to save anybody, anytime. That's how they're wired.

      the idea is everything will (even slightly) influence their decisions and judgement calls, from the fight with the wife as he left to work to the fact the patient is an organ donor and 'therefore some good will come of their demise' to whether lunch was good in the cafeteria.

    17. Re:Never even thought about it by geekoid · · Score: 1

      "Doctors have NO incentive to harvest your organs."

      Incorrect, they have no MONETARY incentive to harvest your organs.
      OTOH, letting you die so they can harvest your organs to save 3 or more lives is a moral incentive to let you die.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    18. Re:Never even thought about it by geekoid · · Score: 1

      "the hospital's ethics commitee will be summoned to discuss the matter and come up with the best possible solution for all parties involved"

      Some is going to die, so clearly it's not the best for all.

      Ethically, is it better for 1 person to die or 2 people? How does the answer to that effect triage?
      As you should know, in triage situation people are actively choosing between people who are difficult to save and people whoa re easy to save. In effect, letting one person dies so many others can be saved.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    19. Re:Never even thought about it by geekoid · · Score: 1

      No, not well put.

      "if transplant surgeons took trauma cases, "
      No, but trauma Docs do know what can be harvested and that people can be saved.

      " all organs were universally compatible,"
      The odds of an organ transplant being successful are pretty high, and will get higher. Eventually they will be near 100%.

      " and physicians liked getting sued,"
      It would need to be obvious what the Dr. had done. Who would even double check if there was a car accident and the Dr. told there family they dies due to injuries in the car accident?

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    20. Re:Never even thought about it by Rich0 · · Score: 1

      In my country, the law says...

      And that law is about as useful to you as the paper it is written on, unless somebody is willing to enforce it to the letter.

      I actually admire quite a bit of the European healthcare system, don't get me wrong. However, I do get annoyed when people talk high-and-mighty about how ethics and rationality are at the heart of everything, and that nobody would stoop to discriminating on medical care.

      Sure, maybe nobody pays in cash, but I can assure you that not all people are treated equally. If you and Tony Blair or some other bigshot both end up in a car crash, and Tony needs a heart, and you are pretty iffy survival-wise, you better hope you aren't a histocompatibilty match. Oh, I'm sure they'll make a "best effort" to save you.

      In the US dollars are used to differentiate between those who get care and those who do not. In many socialized nations nobody pays, but as a result there tend to be queues around non-acute procedures. Ask yourself, do you think that your local MP has to wait as long to get an X-ray read as you would? I'm sure you both end up in the same queue, and doctors don't take care of requests in any particular order, but I'm pretty sure that if somebody important needs care they are sure to get it.

      At least in the US they're honest about how things work...

      Again, I'm actually a fan of many elements of EU healthcare, but I'm under no illusions that it is the great brotherhood of equality that everybody makes it out to be.

    21. Re:Never even thought about it by hairyfeet · · Score: 1

      Actually from my mom who was a nurse for over 20 years in one of the largest critical care units in the south. Some docs were great, some were shitty, some had serious God complexes, and ALL of them made at one time or another serious life or death judgment calls that if anyone besides the docs and nurses knew would be considered "iffy".

      So sorry to burst your little bubble, but if you knew half the shit that goes on in a large metro hospital you would run screaming the other way. i notice you didn't even comment on the fact that two celebrities, one with cancer and the other a lush, neither in a totally rational system would have gotten an organ with so many people with better odds higher on the list, yet both did. Care to explain?

      --
      ACs don't waste your time replying, your posts are never seen by me.
    22. Re:Never even thought about it by Myopic · · Score: 1

      Agreed. All the doctors I know (which is a handful) are like this.

      But, I hang out with generally nice people, and it seems likely to me that at the fringes of medicine there are doctors who would do such a thing -- not, many of them, though.

    23. Re:Never even thought about it by c6gunner · · Score: 1

      I'm sorry that your mom is a nut, and that it's apparently genetic.

    24. Re:Never even thought about it by ISoldat53 · · Score: 1

      Are you saying they don't get paid for their services when they perform a transplant? You haven't been in a hospital recently.

    25. Re:Never even thought about it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm a huge fan of foreigners bashing the US based on assumptions they admit they haven't even bothered to begin to validate. You Europeans are great for that trick, and you get modded up for it, too.

      Stupid self-loathing Americans should feel free to leave, but instead they sit around, drag on our society, and whine that those of us who don't drag won't support them like they were our children. Nice.

    26. Re:Never even thought about it by priegog · · Score: 1

      but I'm under no illusions that it is the great brotherhood of equality that everybody makes it out to be.

      And so you opt to believe what you wish to believe instead of AT LEAST taking into consideration what I'm telling you it is like? I don't even have an illusioned vision of what "they tell us" it is like; I work at a hospital and see how the system works. And it works like I described. the whole

      And that law is about as useful to you as the paper it is written on, unless somebody is willing to enforce it to the letter.

      is bullshit. I really hope you have no real-life understanding of how it works in your country, because it would worry me if those things really happened. I'm sorry if you think I'm being pedantic or exagerating what goes on, but I'm not (and on the pedantic bit, at least not intentionally). The socialized medicine system is certainly not perfect; that's why different countries have slightly different implementations of it. But that's why there's also PRIVATE medicine, where if you have the dough and wish to part from it, you may do so, and there you will find doctors more inclined to "pamper" you (ie: give you the meds that you request but don't really need, long consult times, no waiting lists, etc). As for me being in an accident that somehow requires a heart at the same time as the prime minister... I really can't say, I have never witnessed such a case... I have witnessed less soap-opera-y cases where one patient is rich and powerful (to the degree of being in a private hospital instead of the public one) and "normal" citizen; but since the one who decides who gets what is the national transplants commitee, (which is in another city entirely; they don't even interact with the patients, so I don't see how they'd be swayed one way or another), only the organ-specific criteria matters in the end.

    27. Re:Never even thought about it by lupinstel · · Score: 1

      I don't know about you, but the 40 year me wouldn't mind being inside a cute 19 year old right about now.

      --
      Don't blame me, I voted for Cthulhu.
    28. Re:Never even thought about it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "but they try to save anybody, anytime."

      Strange, as a person who was in medical school, I find this the exact opposite. While there is complete assurance that people will try to help out at some point to save the life of their patient completely, complete judgment and qualification in the organ donor area is severely lacking. Now, usually, it's to the detriment of losing potential donors, but I've also seen and been involved in arguments amongst peers over what is and *should* be allowable should a patient _likely_ be too far gone as to when to let go so their organs are harvested effectively to maximize their potential. Note I said likely, not were gone.

      This is, to me, too early.

      I also, while absolutely not doubting your claims, think that your opinion of those MDs and wannabes you know is certainly clouded two ways. One, potentially, by how you view them, which is likely favorably; the general public to this day do not blame or understand the rise of many issues in health care stemming from doctor's themselves (see ERISA and the rise of HMOs pushed by doctors pushing costs north). Second, and more importantly, I think you misunderstand their absolutism against and near horror at early harvesting as suggesting that they wouldn't do such a thing as professionals or due to their "wiring"--it's not. It's sheer fear that they would be perceived as not doing their utmost, which in their professional such a perception (hinged on doing such a thing, not merely talking about it) or even slightly suggesting it would quickly make them an outcast amongst their peers and certainly their current and potential patient base.

      Yes, I realize it's strange, that there would be those that talk about early harvesting as a bad thing, yet pronounce it in argument that it's sometimes okay, but that's likely because you are perceived as an outsider and are encountering doctors in an environment where you are a layperson. (The mention of undergrads holding this stance is laughable; they know shit at thei stage, even the medical students, it's still white coat eyed glory.) But it's something that comes up, and certainly has while I was in med school and I know amongst my other sibling, who is an MD, it's come up. It's also due to the, say, dichotomy of the issue--many will push hard to save a life any way *they* see as possible, but once they decide it's fruitless or over, then it's donor time, when that may actually not be the best case (which is also why in the US system there's further levels of review that often protect the patient, but they are not absolute once a signature is given).

    29. Re:Never even thought about it by Fire_Storm82 · · Score: 1

      Are you giving your organs to help someone in need? or only to save someone you feel is worth it to save, based on 1 decision they've made?

    30. Re:Never even thought about it by hairyfeet · · Score: 1

      Wow, not only do you have NO answer at all, but the best you can do is name calling! Maybe you wanna stick your fingers in your ears next and go "la la la" as I heard it is a good way for kool aid drinkers to never lose their RDF.

      --
      ACs don't waste your time replying, your posts are never seen by me.
    31. Re:Never even thought about it by c6gunner · · Score: 1

      "demonlapin" gave you a comprehensive answer, which you completely ignored. I see no reason to waste my time.

    32. Re:Never even thought about it by c6gunner · · Score: 1

      The initial scenario was a doctor getting the hots for his young female patient, and killing some old dude to help her out. Your scenario is a doctor thinking "hrm, maybe I should kill this geezer so that someone I've never seen can use his organs". While your scenario is more likely than the original, it's only more likely because the original had a probability of zero. The odds of it occurring are still low enough that it warrants no serious discussion.

    33. Re:Never even thought about it by LordVader717 · · Score: 1

      They don't. At least in most major western countries. In most cases Hospitals actually lose out when organs are donated. It's a fairly difficult operation and takes up a good amount of resources. It's a very expensive procedure and the reimbursement they receive for it is often very lean. Often times they are accused of letting opportunities for donation slip because of this.

    34. Re:Never even thought about it by demonlapin · · Score: 1

      I am a professor of anesthesiology at a transplant center. During residency, I trained in ICUs and pronounced death by brain death. Both during residency and in practice, I have provided anesthetic management for organ donors. It's also a level one trauma center with a catchment area of perhaps 150 miles' radius. Which is to say: I know a lot about trauma, and am more than passingly familiar with the organ donation process. Consider this your reward for posting this while logged in.

      Here's how it works: person has trauma. They are brought to our hospital either directly, or as a transfer (usually via helicopter) from a smaller hospital that can't handle the case. When they arrive, they are brought into the emergency room and evaluated by the ER docs, the trauma surgery team, and possibly one of the on-call anesthesiologists (depending on how bad it looks). The patient then is brought to the OR, the ICU, or a regular room depending on how ill he or she is.

      The only path that leads to organ donation is the one that takes you to the neuro ICU due to head trauma. If you've had low blood pressure due to injury/bleeding, you're not going to be eligible to donate. So, you go to the neuro ICU. Up there, the neurosurgeons evaluate you constantly, and treat as best as they are able. If it turns out that you have an immense injury that is probably not going to be survivable, the organ donation agency is called. They draw blood samples to try to match your tissue to potential recipients. If the potential donor does actually die (brain death), the organ donation agency only then notifies the possible recipient transplant surgeons that organs are available. Our transplant surgeons get first pick, but anything that doesn't match anyone on our list gets shopped around to nearby transplant centers.

      After all of that, the (now legally dead) person is brought to the OR for the organ harvest. All in all, it takes at least 24 hours to put together, and it's intermediated by the organ donation agencies. Frankly, until someone has been declared dead, we don't even know if we have a match. Our great success in not having organs rejected comes from not transplanting organs into people who aren't very, very good tissue matches.

      So no, despite your desire for it to be otherwise, we don't actually bump people off for organs. After all, if even one nurse, tech, therapist, or anyone else in the entire process thought that something wrong was happening and reported the physician to the state medical board, the physician would face license revocation, criminal prosecution for murder, and civil suit for wrongful death. Do you really think we care that much about money?

    35. Re:Never even thought about it by demonlapin · · Score: 1
      Well,

      if anyone besides the docs and nurses knew

      pretty much kills the rest of your argument. Do you think that nurses all have God complexes too? Or is it perhaps that people who don't do critical care can't make rational judgments, because nobody can possibly be rational about whether or not to keep trying on a family member? I'm an anesthesiologist. I trained in critical care units. I work daily with nurse anesthetists, every single one of whom is a former critical care nurse. I don't ever - ever - go against my nurses unless I have a very, very good reason to do so. Have you ever suggested it was time to give up on a trauma case? I have. I've polled the room - me, the surgeon, my residents, his residents, the nurses - everybody. And if someone says they think we have a chance, we keep going. I'm sorry that your mom never told you about that. And I'm even sorrier that there are physicians out there who ignore nurses as a general rule (FWIW, some nurses are shitty, too. It's not just physicians.) But we are the experts, and we deal with it all the time, and it's routine to us.

      I don't know any details about Hagman, but Jobs got a transplant because he registered on a bunch of lists. The catch was that he could afford a private jet to get to the transplant center within the requisite time frame (several hours). This is outside the reach of average people, but you don't have to be Jobs rich to afford it - $100k should get you a chartered private jet to anywhere in the country.

    36. Re:Never even thought about it by hairyfeet · · Score: 1

      Oh, you mean this whole sentence "You know, if transplant surgeons took trauma cases, and all organs were universally compatible, and physicians liked getting sued, that might bear some tiny resemblance to an actual moral dilemma. But none of those is the case."

      So tell me, oh wise one, how exactly does that explain how a lush and someone riddled with cancer get to the top of the list, over thousands of healthier and more likely to survive people, because they are celebrities...hmmm?

      It doesn't, and you frankly don't have an answer so all you can do is insult. But go ahead and pretend, if that makes you sleep better at night. Pretend doctors never make judgment calls, or that their own feeling never become involved in life or death decisions. it would really burst your bubble to have to accept that doctors are affected by emotions, and fame, and ego, and a million other things. Often a call can go either way, literally a quarter flip, and I hate to break the news to you but unless a doctor is grossly negligent nobody is gonna say anything, anymore than cops are gonna rat each other out.

      So go ahead and insult, stick your fingers in your ears, whatever floats your boat. It still doesn't change the fact that I just named two off the top of my head that shouldn't be alive in your rational system, yet here they are. Or are you so delusional that you will stand here and argue that a man with multiple cancer surgeries and a lush were really the best choices for those healthy organs? Because if so there is some nice bridges in NY I'd like to sell you.

      --
      ACs don't waste your time replying, your posts are never seen by me.
  6. Why would they want a sinner's organs anyway? by rolfwind · · Score: 2, Interesting

    It's apparent their time is out, why are the orthodox trying to subvert god's will? Don't they want to go to heaven?

    1. Re:Why would they want a sinner's organs anyway? by Zapotek · · Score: 2

      Unless you're a hardcore brainwashed fanatic suicide bomber, religion pretty much goes out the window when your life's on the line...

    2. Re:Why would they want a sinner's organs anyway? by linzeal · · Score: 4, Funny

      A lot of Jewish folk in the US have pig valves in them. There are tons of heart and vascular problems that have nothing to do with diet in some of their communities, it is sort of heartbreaking.

    3. Re:Why would they want a sinner's organs anyway? by Idiomatick · · Score: 0, Troll

      At least the "hardcore brainwashed fanatic suicide bomber"s stand by what they believe and go with it, that I can respect! Even if they are crazy at least they are being good people within those bounds.

      On the otherhand, saying you believe one thing but then going crying to science when you are in trouble is horrible. And it is these half-assed religious people that allow the religions to perpetuate. Causing arguably more harm over time.

    4. Re:Why would they want a sinner's organs anyway? by darkmeridian · · Score: 1

      Everyone goes to heaven, but there's no reason it has to be sooner rather than later. God can wait the extra few decades before re-making your acquaintance.

      --
      A NYC lawyer blogs. http://www.chuangblog.com/
    5. Re:Why would they want a sinner's organs anyway? by Paradigm_Complex · · Score: 3, Insightful

      That'd be an odd statement from anyone familiar with Judaism itself, as opposed to someone generalizing it along with other religions.

      According to most Jews' interpretation of Jewish law, saving lives takes priority over nearly everything else. This is why, for example, taking pig insulin is perfectly okay.

      Consider the stereotype of Jews being doctors. Jews, in general, don't like throwing lives away.

      --
      "A witty saying proves nothing." - Voltaire
    6. Re:Why would they want a sinner's organs anyway? by rolfwind · · Score: 2, Insightful

      According to most Jews' interpretation of Jewish law, saving lives takes priority over nearly everything else. This is why, for example, taking pig insulin is perfectly okay.

      And yet, being an organ donor isn't.

    7. Re:Why would they want a sinner's organs anyway? by blackraven14250 · · Score: 1

      Jewish law doesn't prohibit anything involving pigs except for eating them, and praying in places where you can smell them. Get your facts straight before you blathering on about the corruption of a religion you don't know much about.

    8. Re:Why would they want a sinner's organs anyway? by aussie_a · · Score: 1

      There are plenty of mormons (or is it Jehovas Witnesses?) who would disagree when it comes to blood transfusions. I'd hardly say the same people are about to blow themselves up in a terrorist attack.

      But hey, at least you'll get modded up by the anti-religious types who come here.

      An atheist who respects other people's ability to have different beliefs.

    9. Re:Why would they want a sinner's organs anyway? by aussie_a · · Score: 1

      Citation needed ;)

    10. Re:Why would they want a sinner's organs anyway? by Runaway1956 · · Score: 1, Interesting

      All religions, arts and sciences are branches of the same tree.
      Albert Einstein

      --
      "Windows is like the faint smell of piss in a subway: it's there, and there's nothing you can do about it." - Charlie Br
    11. Re:Why would they want a sinner's organs anyway? by Mr.+Freeman · · Score: 1

      Being an organ donor saves lives. And donating an organ isn't like donating to some relief fund where you're not entirely sure EXACTLY how much good your $20 actually did. You donate a heart and you've saved a life, full stop. You donate a liver, a kidney, etc, you've saved a life (or prolonged one substantially).

      Once you're dead it's not like you're harming your body by allowing someone else to cut into it and use your organs to save lives.

      --
      -1 disagree is not a modifier for a reason. -1 troll, flaimbait, redundant, overrated are NOT acceptable substitutes.
    12. Re:Why would they want a sinner's organs anyway? by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      I don't mind anyone's set of believes. Believe all you want, but my tolerance ends when your set of believes force someone that depends on you to die because you refuse them a life saving operation.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    13. Re:Why would they want a sinner's organs anyway? by Opportunist · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Someone hand that guy an interesting mod. This is actually interesting.

      It's true, pretty much the whole Torah goes out the window the moment a life is at stake. It needn't even be yours, when you may only as much as possibly save a life you're not only allowed but actually required to put the religious laws behind that.

      Donating an organ can easily save a life. Not donating would actually be very wrong.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    14. Re:Why would they want a sinner's organs anyway? by clarkkent09 · · Score: 1

      You'd think with belief in afterlife, power of prayer and all that, when your life is on the line is when religion would really kick in? What's the point of holding strong beliefs if you throw them out the window the moment it really matters.

      --
      Negative moral value of force outweighs the positive value of good intentions.
    15. Re:Why would they want a sinner's organs anyway? by ars · · Score: 1

      That's not accurate.

      What Jews prohibit is organ donation after brain death, but while the heart is still beating.

      They consider it murder.

      The argument is over the definition of life, not organ donation.

      --
      -Ariel
    16. Re:Why would they want a sinner's organs anyway? by ars · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I wish the article was clearer. The problem is not organ donation. The problem is that most donations are done after brain death, but before cardiac death.

      Jews consider that murder. As long as the heart is beating the person is alive.

      Donation after cardiac death are always permitted. But that's rarely done.

      --
      -Ariel
    17. Re:Why would they want a sinner's organs anyway? by ars · · Score: 1

      > Once you're dead it's not like you're harming your body by allowing someone else to cut into it and use your organs to save lives.

      And that's the crux of the matter. Jews do not consider brain death to be death. As long as the heart is beating, the person is alive. So removing organs would then be murder.

      --
      -Ariel
    18. Re:Why would they want a sinner's organs anyway? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I see what you did there..

    19. Re:Why would they want a sinner's organs anyway? by darthflo · · Score: 1

      Well, if a beating heart is all that's required to be considered alive in Judaism, donating quite clearly is not murder: the donor heart will beat on in the recipients body for quite some time after the donation.
      The only "murder" taking place would be done to the recipient's heart, and only if it's still beating (probably more like "forced to beat").

    20. Re:Why would they want a sinner's organs anyway? by couchslug · · Score: 1

      That's hardly a Troll. Attacks on religion are as legitimate as attacks on any other superstition.

      Pointing out ridiculous religionist behaviors isn't trolling, and religion obviously deserves no respect.

      Just because Jews got killed and the survivors milked it for money to kill and oppress Muslim Arabs doesn't make them worthy of respect for other than their military prowess. I respect the military prowess of the Waffen SS too, (gotta throw in some Godwin!) but I don't share their ideology...

      Israel is only supported by Christian fanatics in the US. US Jews, most of who are NOT Zionist, (and proved it by voting about 78-percent for "Muslim" Obama) mostly don't support Zionism or Orthodox Judaism.

      --
      "This post is an artistic work of fiction and falsehood. Only a fool would take anything posted here as fact."
    21. Re:Why would they want a sinner's organs anyway? by Bartab · · Score: 1

      Israel is only supported by Christian fanatics in the US.

      False.

      --
      Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from a rigged demo.
    22. Re:Why would they want a sinner's organs anyway? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You have posted this over and over - we heard you the first time. The problem with your point is that it is a poor excuse. You might as well state that you believe death doesn't happen "until rigor mortis". Hey, it's not about organ donation, it's just that you don't believe death happens until a few hours after all major organs have stopped functioning!

      There is nothing arbitrary about choosing brain death as death. When your brain is no longer able to function, you exist in no meaningful ("earthly", if you really want) sense. You can't think, you can't feel, you can't experience, you can't perceive yourself. You are dead. It doesn't matter whether your heart is beating or not. It doesn't matter whether your fingernails are still growing - and they won't, but this is all about baseless superstition, right?

    23. Re:Why would they want a sinner's organs anyway? by guhknew · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I have trouble with the notion that we must somehow feel obligated to "respect" someone's beliefs. I have no respect for a belief system that can not be adequately justified. That's not to say I don't respect someone's right to believe what they want. I imagine that the distinction, however, is lost upon most people (and this confusion is probably the cause of the perception that any nonsense should be respected as long as it's a belief).

    24. Re:Why would they want a sinner's organs anyway? by ars · · Score: 2, Informative

      I know I posted this multiple times.

      Most of the posts here were about organ donation and how it's not fair to take but not donate, blah, blah.

      What I wanted was to at least inform the conversion toward the actual issues, and not some invented problem.

      I have no problem with people arguing over the definition of death, like you did. I just wanted people to at least be aware of what the true issue was.

      I don't agree with you BTW. We don't know anywhere near enough about the brain to be able to say what you did. By that definition (upper brain death) many lower animals are dead their entire life. (Or for example that chicken that lived without a head - but it had a living brain stem.)

      Cardiac death is much more unambiguous. And BTW, the heart can not beat without a functioning brain stem. So even brain death, is not total brain death.

      --
      -Ariel
    25. Re:Why would they want a sinner's organs anyway? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      In the sense that they are all human activities perhaps. Religion relates to science solely by representing the discredited "god did it" hypothesis.

    26. Re:Why would they want a sinner's organs anyway? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      (Or for example that chicken that lived without a head - but it had a living brain stem.)

      Some animals have specific behaviours which are actioned independently of the higher brain, but which in a human would require consciousness. Humans have a habit of wrongly assuming that the animal is either (1) still conscious; or (2) never really was conscious. There are a few anecdotes (N.B.) about chickens, and there's the well-known spinal cat lab preparation - cats can walk without a brain. None of these preparations are able to display any of the independent thought or behaviour of a creature with a brain, and there is no evidence that they ever will. Organ function would soon cease if they were left alone.

      Cardiac death is much more unambiguous.

      Not at all. "Cardiac death" is an informal term to mean, perhaps, "died because his heart somehow fucked up" - it's not a specific diagnosis and you cannot declare death in this way. There is "cardiac arrest", but that is often reversible.
        PVS, [higher] brain death, [total] brain death, etc OTOH are definitions which have been debated in the medical and legal communities.

    27. Re:Why would they want a sinner's organs anyway? by ImOnlySleeping · · Score: 1

      But in order to receive an organ, orthodox jews would have to consider themselves accessories to murder after the fact. Double Standard.

      --
      Everybody seems to think I'm lazy I don't mind, I think they're crazy
    28. Re:Why would they want a sinner's organs anyway? by ShadowRangerRIT · · Score: 1

      Because Jews aren't all tied up in sin like Christians are. They're tied up in rules. And as long as *they* didn't break the rule, all is well.

      --
      $_ = "wftedskaebjgdpjgidbsmnjgcdwatb"; tr/a-z/oh, turtleneck Phrase Jar!/; print
    29. Re:Why would they want a sinner's organs anyway? by c6gunner · · Score: 1

      Congrats, you win the Crazy Comment of the Day award. You've managed to pull conspiracy theories, antisemitism, and just plain old ignorance together into a diatribe that no sane person could ever fully appreciate. I applaud you, sir!

    30. Re:Why would they want a sinner's organs anyway? by nidarus · · Score: 3, Informative

      Jews consider that murder. As long as the heart is beating the person is alive.

      Some Orthodox Rabbis consider that murder. And there's been some progress in that area as well. It's not a resolved issue, by any measure.

      Aside from that - mod parent up. 90% of the comments here are based on BS.

    31. Re:Why would they want a sinner's organs anyway? by geekoid · · Score: 1

      Yes, we must save people from God's heavenly embrace.

      really, it makes no sense, like any other cult.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    32. Re:Why would they want a sinner's organs anyway? by Dog-Cow · · Score: 1

      Taking pig insulin would be perfectly OK in any circumstance, unless one was swallowing it.

    33. Re:Why would they want a sinner's organs anyway? by Idiomatick · · Score: 1

      Good point. I assumed by 'unclean' they meant it in a metaphorical sense... like 'Chaos God Nurgle the unclean one'. Apparently it really just meant dirty. And that there wasn't any particular reason given why certain animals were banned. (G-d has something against uncloven animals?)

      So my bad, I retract the statement in this case.

    34. Re:Why would they want a sinner's organs anyway? by Idiomatick · · Score: 1

      Lol... the link I saw between them all was 'requires creativity' ... or 'created by man'. So I'm not sure what he was getting at.

    35. Re:Why would they want a sinner's organs anyway? by sjames · · Score: 1

      It's a bit more complex than that. For some it is forbidden. For others it would be fine except that the medical definition of death doesn't match the religious definition (and so it would be killing one to save another).

      Others have no problem with it. Note that Israel is a Jewish state, yet organ donation obviously exists there.

    36. Re:Why would they want a sinner's organs anyway? by multi+io · · Score: 1
  7. crazy hypocrites by phantomfive · · Score: 4, Insightful
    That position sounds so insane, that I thought that there must be more to it than that, but no, it really is that hypocritical. Check out this quote from the article:

    "If I can't contribute organs because of my religious beliefs, the state shouldn't be allowed to harm me,"

    Seriously? This is the kind of stuff Jesus was criticizing in the bible: he tried to show that loving each other and helping each other out is more important than following the law to exactness. Fortunately it is a minority that feel this way, most of the rabbis in Israel are more sane (according to the article).

    --
    Qxe4
    1. Re:crazy hypocrites by Animats · · Score: 2, Insightful

      That position sounds so insane, that I thought that there must be more to it than that, but no, it really is that hypocritical.

      That's the religious right. Doesn't matter which religion. The Islamic, Jewish, and Christian far right have much in common - ODing on prayer, oppressing women, having big families, keeping kids from learning too much about the real world, enforcing nutty rules, and demanding tax subsidies. They even have similar looking leaders - old guys with long beards wearing black.

    2. Re:crazy hypocrites by story645 · · Score: 5, Interesting

      oppressing women

      The funny thing about the far right Jews is that most of the guys are in some form of learning program, so the women are often the primary breadwinners. This leads to the average Jewish woman on the far right having more education and job training than her husband.

      --
      open source modern art: laser taggi
    3. Re:crazy hypocrites by Tom90deg · · Score: 4, Interesting

      It's always very difficult when religion and medicine clash. If you're a doctor, chances are good that at some point, someone will refuse treatment because of their religious beliefs. Most of the time it's "Whatever, you'll be in pain for the next two weeks, but that's your choice." but it's gets much much harder if say, a little girl is brought in with a fever that's getting worse. "No problem, give her some basic meds, and she'll be good to go." you'd think, and then her parents show up and say, "You can't give her any medication." And you know that without it, the girl WILL die, or at best have severe brain damage. Try to explain this to the parents, and they just say, "It's our beliefs, no medicine can be given." And legally, you can't do anything, and if you DO give the girl medicaiton and save her life, you can and will be sued for malpractice.

      I don't mind religion, so long as it doesn't harm anyone, but people who would actually think, "We would rather our child die then be given medicine." I just don't understand.

    4. Re:crazy hypocrites by linzeal · · Score: 1

      The idea that political allegiances are predicated upon genetic markers that has been thrown around lately has me thinking what we will do when we have this knowledge out there in the open?

      Will extremists of all sorts use this knowledge of, " the way your heart and mind lies " so that they can only have the most rabid and devoted followers in their missions, be they military or ecclesiastical?

    5. Re:crazy hypocrites by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Funny

      This is the kind of stuff Jesus was criticizing in the bible

      Jesus is not high on the orthodox required reading list.

      Hah!!! captcha = ducked

    6. Re:crazy hypocrites by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Seriously? This is the kind of stuff Jesus was criticizing in the bible: he tried to show that loving each other and helping each other out is more important than following the law to exactness.

      *cough* They're jewish. Jesus never happened.

    7. Re:crazy hypocrites by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      To be honest, it really doesn't matter. Jesus based his entire message on the law of Moses, and, as the article mentions, most rabbis agree with him on this point.

      --
      Qxe4
    8. Re:crazy hypocrites by Ihmhi · · Score: 3, Funny

      They even have similar looking leaders - old guys with long beards wearing black.

      And of course, they have formed a coalition to control the world through the sound of awesome rock music, otherwise known as ZZ Top.

    9. Re:crazy hypocrites by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      The idea that political allegiances are predicated upon genetic markers that has been thrown around lately

      Oh no, genetic differences are only one of the many differences politicians use to divide us. It is just as easy to divide a people based on how they feel about evolution, or abortion, or global warming, or where they were born, or their accent or their eye color, or whether they believe in witches. There is no need for science to get in the way either, think of how intense people get about the global warming debate, where the majority of arguments on both sides have absolutely nothing to do with science. It's sad, actually how easy we are to manipulate, but to end on an optimistic note, I feel with the advent of the internet and globalization (I know some people hate that, but oh well), people are starting to realize we are actually all more alike than we are different. Things are getting better.

      If you've noticed that lately government has gotten more corrupt, it's not because they are actually more corrupt, it's because the corruption is getting harder to hide as more people pay attention. That's a good thing.

      --
      Qxe4
    10. Re:crazy hypocrites by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If they uphold religious beliefs like not being allowed to donate organs... Here's an idea to ponder. How about a religion that doesn't allow you to donate to people of other religions?

      Hypothetically, you could have a religion that requires you only donate organs to other people of the same religion... and anyone that really care's about living would just waiver their religious beliefs by ticking that box on the form and claim to be from of that religion too to get access to an extended pool of donors.

    11. Re:crazy hypocrites by El_Muerte_TDS · · Score: 1

      They even have similar looking leaders - old guys with long beards wearing black.

      Didn't know that about ZZ-Top

    12. Re:crazy hypocrites by aussie_a · · Score: 1

      This is the kind of stuff Jesus was criticizing in the bible

      Jewish people aren't exactly well known for following the teachings of Christ.

    13. Re:crazy hypocrites by aussie_a · · Score: 1

      This isn't a mere throwaway line though. Answer the question: Do you allow someone to force an incompetent person to forgo life saving medical procedures?

    14. Re:crazy hypocrites by HoppQ · · Score: 1

      They even have similar looking leaders - old guys with long beards wearing black.

      Didn't know that about ZZ-Top

      Quite frankly the world would be a better place if people followed the teachings of ZZ Top as opposed to e.g. the Pope.

      --
      My sig will be released in 2015 third quarter. Rating pending.
    15. Re:crazy hypocrites by icebraining · · Score: 1

      Too selfish to have children?

      With the world population raising from 3 to more than 6.5 Billion in just the last 50 years, I consider having children a selfish act.

    16. Re:crazy hypocrites by dziman · · Score: 1

      Do you find it interesting that many hospitals have a religious spin on their names?

    17. Re:crazy hypocrites by Mr.+Freeman · · Score: 1

      We aren't fucking talking about some bullshit like censoring the internet or requiring GPS monitoring bracelets on children. We're talking about saving a life. The two are completely different and if you can't see that then you have no place to argue.

      --
      -1 disagree is not a modifier for a reason. -1 troll, flaimbait, redundant, overrated are NOT acceptable substitutes.
    18. Re:crazy hypocrites by Tromad · · Score: 1

      Well, in your example a tepid bath could reduce the fever, so there aren't zero options, but you are correct it is far better to also prescribe real fever reducers such as acetaminophen or ibuprofen, they are cheap, relatively low side effects, and they work. Sometimes you can convince the crazy people to take willow bark, which is the basis for aspirin; especially the religious because there are bible quotes that back this. However, willow bark takes much longer to take effect so it just makes more sense to use OTC fever reducers. Note none of this is medical advice, I'm just arguing about your example.

    19. Re:crazy hypocrites by Tromad · · Score: 1

      Just replying to myself that the tepid bath advice is wrong, I couldn't find any research to back it up as a useful fever reducer. It just makes more sense to use medication.

    20. Re:crazy hypocrites by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    21. Re:crazy hypocrites by Vectormatic · · Score: 1

      honestly, i think giving donors preference is WRONG, basically it is an unfair bias on who gets that liver. The person who needs it the most (and wants it obviously) should get it

      If that law is passed, i want to be giving preference at every payed-by-tax institution, since i pay more tax then my average fellow-citizen, i want it so that the people with cheap run-down cars can only drive in the right lane, since they pay less in taxes for using the road..

      This proposal just goes right against the whole belief that everyone should be treated equally, and sure sometimes i would love to be treated better then the rest, but it just isnt fair (and god, how i hate that :P)

      --
      People, what a bunch of bastards
    22. Re:crazy hypocrites by demonlapin · · Score: 5, Interesting

      If it's a life-saving procedure on a minor, you can very easily do something about it legally. Have the hospital lawyers get a court order. We do it for Jehovah's Witnesses' children and blood on a reasonably frequent basis.

    23. Re:crazy hypocrites by Rakshasa+Taisab · · Score: 1

      And legally, you can't do anything, and if you DO give the girl medicaiton and save her life, you can and will be sued for malpractice.

      In sane countries those parents would end up in jail.

      --
      - These characters were randomly selected.
    24. Re:crazy hypocrites by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      I'm still only a medical student, so this could be a bit off.

      It's my understanding that one may obtain a court order to provide life-saving treatment to minors, over the religious objections of their parents. I've heard that some ERs have pager #s for judges, for this type of situation. You can martyr yourself (i.e. refuse medical treatment), as an adult with the mental capacity to make decision about your own medical care, but not your dependent children.

      As to being sued for malpractice: you can always be sued, regardless of whether or not your conduct was correct. The idea is, if you practice medicine within established evidence and social norms (i.e. provide lifesaving treatments to children, who can't yet understand the consequences of refusing them), harassing suits should not get very far.

    25. Re:crazy hypocrites by sourcerror · · Score: 1

      Why is it always the same old bullshit when people want to control others?

      You mean the parents controlling their children?

      Look, there's reason we have child protection services. Your child is not your property.

    26. Re:crazy hypocrites by xaxa · · Score: 1

      Do you find it interesting that many hospitals have a religious spin on their names?

      Recent ones? The only ones here with religion in the name are named after saints, and were either founded a long time ago (e.g. St Bart's, the oldest) or are simply named after the town (e.g. St Helier's Hospital, St Helier, Sutton, London).

      (Full list of hospitals in the UK.)

    27. Re:crazy hypocrites by mdwh2 · · Score: 1

      I don't see why it should be hard though. If people want to refuse treatment for themselves, fine. But it doesn't follow that they get to harm their child. Parents don't have absolute control over their children - there are all sorts of rules they have to follow, for everything from child abuse to compulsory education. I don't see why trying to prevent treatment for a child isn't treated as abuse.

    28. Re:crazy hypocrites by Dog-Cow · · Score: 1

      Actually, I think a higher percentage of Jews believed Jesus existed than non-Jews.

      We just don't believe he was anything special.

    29. Re:crazy hypocrites by Rich0 · · Score: 3, Interesting

      First, I agree with you, but I'll go ahead and toss something really controversial and maybe burn some karma:

      How is a society that allows children to die from parental withholding of medication any different than a society that allows children to grow up into a life of crime, or poverty, or obesity, or any number of other things that can happen to kids because they don't have great parents?

      Withholding of medicine is an easy target, but the fact is that society is quite content to let kids fail in numerous ways simply for being born to the wrong parents. The problem is that fixing this is EXTREMELY difficult if not impossible - it isn't just a matter of throwing a moderate amount of money at the problem. Avoiding the problem is also highly repugnant to most people since the only way to avoid it is to mandate contraception implants for everybody unless you have a breeding license, or abort children post-conception (and figure out what to do with kids that manage to survive past birth).

      In reality, the odd kid that dies from treatable pneumonia makes the news but is a blip in the statistics. The real problem (size-wise) is the millions of kids who go on to live in slums or prisons. As a society we seem to be willing to accept a LOT of the latter but none of the former, and I'm not sure it really has anything to do with being genuinely interested in child welfare.

    30. Re:crazy hypocrites by Animats · · Score: 3, Informative

      The funny thing about the far right Jews is that most of the guys are in some form of learning program, so the women are often the primary breadwinners. This leads to the average Jewish woman on the far right having more education and job training than her husband.

      In the US, that's true. In Israel, the ultra-orthodox have Government subsidies.. There are American Jews who think this is a disaster for Israel. "In Israel today, two-thirds of ultra-Orthodox men spend their days studying the Torah and Talmud and do not participate in the workforce. Their unemployment is subsidized by the state to the tune of about $1.3 billion a year. There is nothing inherent in ultra-Orthodox religious tenets that keeps believers from working: In countries such as Britain and the United States, ultra-Orthodox families do work because they know that they can't depend on outlays from the state. Israel must adopt similar rules if it wants a first-class economy."

      Saudi Arabia has dug itself into a similar hole, with a huge number of state-subsidized religious figures, but they have oil money.

    31. Re:crazy hypocrites by yariv · · Score: 1

      That position sounds so insane, that I thought that there must be more to it than that...

      You were right. Those that claim they can't contribute organs due to religious beliefs mean they can't contribute organs before cardiac death, and from what I understand (I'm not a MD) it it usually impossible to use the organs after cardiac death, and they are taken after brain death. What Elyashiv opposes is causing cardiac death to those who suffered brain death, claiming this would be murder. In general, the religious Jewish law is that preservation of life overrides everything (almost everything, see this). I'm not claiming Elyashiv's point is reasonable, but it is not that unreasonable....

    32. Re:crazy hypocrites by AaronMK · · Score: 1

      The funny thing about the far right Jews is that most of the guys are in some form of learning program, so the women are often the primary breadwinners. This leads to the average Jewish woman on the far right having more education and job training than her husband.

      ... and, as a result, the oppression of a disproportionate burden of the real world labor and effort required to support a household and a family. Education and job training does not negate the oppression element, especially in a culture where much of one's social status comes from performing rituals, many of which women are forbidden from carrying out.

      Even among Orthodox Jews, it is not common to have the women be the primary breadwinner so the man can afford to spend all his waking hours studying Torah.

      It does happen though. I went to school with a kid who was a poster child of laziness. He essentially took shelter from real world responsibilities in his intense study of Torah. In typical matchmaker fashion, they found him the perfect wife. The rest, including the many children for which the wife also earn money to support and take care of, is history....

    33. Re:crazy hypocrites by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ODing on prayer: The listed religions all have some sort of belief in a relationship between God and his people or the believer. Just as in any relationship communication is important. Prayer is suppose to be a believers' communication with their God. The more important the relationship to you the more likely you are to communicate with the other party in that relationship. i.e. lots of prayer

      oppressing women: I'm going to assuming this means the freedoms women have today in the western world. First of all every culture has traditionally held women in a lesser status than men. Not saying this is right, just the way it was everywhere. All the listed religions started during those time and would naturally inherit and incorporate some customs from the atmospheres in which they arose. The religious right as you like to think of them or more accurately religious conservatives are called conservatives for a reason, they believe religious traditions should be conserved. Obviously this would usually included traditional views of a woman's role in society. That role was usually the care and raising of any children; a huge and important job which they at least seamed to be suited for by nature and the division of labor of the times. Keep in mind that traditionally the most important activity of any society is the propagation of the population. No or little propagation and your society dies out. This may very well still be true today, Europe and most of the western world seams to be suffering from this fate. BTW, at least in Christian tradition women had pretty important roles in the expansion of the religion and many conservative churches still have large roles for its women members even if its not in the positions of bishops of priests (something that is the way it is from generations of tradition).

      having big families: And this is bad because? Larger families have many advantages for both the individual and society at large. Furthermore the western world is actually suffering a population loss. This will have a huge impact in its future position and status in the world. Perhaps that encouragement towards large families is not such a bad thing after all.

      keeping kids from learning too much about the real world: This varies, is very subjective, and in the subjects involved may not really matter much anyway to a person's life. Its also highly arguable as religious conservatives in all groups do have large percentages of highly educated members. And while I am less familiar with non-Catholic conservatives if the Church (catholic-wise) is any indication they actually encourage very high levels of learning as being a religious scholar demands it by nature. This statement usually falls down to two subjects either evolution or heliocentricism back in the old days. Whatever your point of view on the controversy past or modern there is one thing that should be apparent. Even today if an everyday person actually believes in creationism or that the Earth is the center of the universe, it does not matter one iota in that person's life or contribution to society. Unless you want to actually be studying or working in a field that consists of such knowledge, it would pretty much be useless knowledge to you such as who the current American idol winner is. Is knowledge useful, yes, but not all knowledge is an absolute necessity.

      enforcing nutty rules: If tradition holds that you wear a funny hat and you believe in following tradition you will wear a funny hat. The only reason you think a rule is nutty is because that rule does not fit with your point of view. Not everyone believes what you do. Additionally most religious rules actually had very important reasons behind their establishment; such as the non-eating of pork in Judaism and Islam. BTW, continuing religious tradition is also a very important reason, to a traditional religious person.

      demanding tax subsidies: Quite frankly if one could get it, who would not demand a subsidy.

    34. Re:crazy hypocrites by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Seriously? This is the kind of stuff Jesus was criticizing in the bible

      Yes, tell that to the people who crucified him!

    35. Re:crazy hypocrites by story645 · · Score: 1

      many of which women are forbidden from carrying out

      But I don't want to carry 'em out and quite happy that I don't have too. For the record, I'm an orthodox female and I seriously don't feel oppressed, nor do many of the girls I know.

      Even among Orthodox Jews, it is not common to have the women be the primary breadwinner so the man can afford to spend all his waking hours studying Torah.

      Depends on the circle. Quite a few of my friends/cohorts are supporting their husbands 'cause they're in that religious community; the more modern orthodox crowd tends to not do out and most of the more orthodox circles set limits on how long a husband can be learning so that couples can eventually get off welfare.

      --
      open source modern art: laser taggi
    36. Re:crazy hypocrites by story645 · · Score: 1

      In the US, that's true. In Israel, the ultra-orthodox have Government subsidies.

      True, but the wives are also bringing in supplemental income, at least in all the families I know of overseas where the husband is learning.

      I actually agree with you and the article and everything else. I'm not a fan of the kollel system by any stretch of the imagination, I think it's wreaked all sorts of havoc on orthodox Jewish culture (mostly by brainwashing a few generations into believing this is the best path for everyone and anyone), I've got quite a few friends who've been burned or burned out by it, and I currently am very averse to marrying into it. (I'm an orthodox female.)

      --
      open source modern art: laser taggi
  8. Amazing by The+Clockwork+Troll · · Score: 0, Troll

    Supertramp forecasted this eventuality in 1979's "Give a Little Bit" (from Breakfast in America). Their prescience continues to astound.

    --

    There are no karma whores, only moderation johns
  9. Opt-out by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I never understood why organ donation is opt-in rather than opt-out.

    I can understand having religious convictions not to be a donor but the default ought to be "your organs are up for grabs"

    1. Re:Opt-out by laron · · Score: 1

      I would like to see a law of this type combined with a decision: When you renew your driver's license, national ID card or whatever, you have to decide if you would like to participate in organ transplantation (on the donating end only once you are dead of course). This decision is marked in your driver license, so easy to find if you should be a victim of a traffic accident or something like that.

      --
      "Beware of he who would deny you access to information, for in his heart he dreams himself your master."
    2. Re:Opt-out by Kierthos · · Score: 1

      Don't you watch TV or the movies? Something like 90% of doctors* are unscrupulous bastards who would happily sell your organs to rich people who need new kidneys/hearts/lungs/corneas/whatever. If you had to opt-out, how many more victims would these butchers have their pick of?

      *at least, the doctors in said TV shows and movies

      --
      Mr. Hu is not a ninja.
    3. Re:Opt-out by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      They're opt-out in many European countries today.

    4. Re:Opt-out by Animaether · · Score: 3, Informative

      I never understood why organ donation is opt-in rather than opt-out.

      It's a good question - good luck getting any answers, though.

      This has been playing in The Netherlands for a long time now - seems to pop up every few years.

      In 1998 the centralized 'donor register' was started. People can indicate that they want to be a donor, what bits and pieces, that sort of thing.. or indicate that they do -not- want to be a donor. So it's opt-in - by default, if you're not registered / don't have aything written down in your will, your next of kin may decide (in which case 75% of the decisions on this are made against donating organs from the deceased).
      In 2002 the 'minister of health' said there would be no change for at least 2 years, after 2/3rds of the government decisionmakers decided against an opt-out system.
      In 2005, another voting round was held... 78 against, 68 -for- an opt-out system.
      I think there was another debate in 2008 or early 2009 but can't find a reference now.

      None of the press articles on these state why they were against an opt-out system, though. Only statements such as being in favor of promoting becoming a donor, or at least registering - regardless of your choice.

      I'm guessing it's got to do with the taboo on death that still lingers - probably even moreso in the U.S.

      Either that or they fear that somebody would find out that you actively said "no, you can't take my organs", and then couple this to other databases / provisions / label you a cold, selfish, heartless (can't donate that, then!) bastard, etc.

      I'm all for opt-out, with parents/guardians decision up to age 12, at which point anybody can decide for themselves, and at younger ages if the child can demonstrate that they do indeed know what they are deciding on, the consequences, etc. should it come to it that the parent(s)/guardian(s) disagree with the child.
      ( My Sister's Keeper was an interesting, albeit superficial, exploration of that theme )

    5. Re:Opt-out by dodocaptain · · Score: 1

      This is the case here in New Zealand, if you are a donor, it is marked on your drivers license, however organs can still only be taken with permission of family members, if they refuse it overrides your choice to donate.

    6. Re:Opt-out by slimjim8094 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Same in the US. I was about to make some snide comment to the effect that that's bass-ackwards too...

      That's not right. I can make up my mind for myself. It's a deeply, deeply personal choice that really cuts the the heart of what you believe about life.

      It'd be one thing if I refrained from answering (in which case it should be up to them), but if I decided one way or the other that decision should be honored.

      While I love and trust my family, they shouldn't be making that decision for me - nor should they be allowed to.

      The way the system should work: Default is "not stated" in which case they ask the closest family members - without family members, default to 'yes'. You can state "yes" or "no", which is permanent unless you change it (which should be easy).

      Is it more complicated then I'm seeing?

      --
      I have developed a truly marvelous proof of this comment, which this signature is too narrow to contain.
    7. Re:Opt-out by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I can understand having religious convictions not to be a donor but the default ought to be "your organs are up for grabs"

      Not on an unrestricted basis. A lot of people become donors with the intent of helping others. But many of the donated parts are sold for damned good prices through middlemen.

      I don't care if they scrap me out, but not to aggrandize some ghoulish bastard out to make money off me.

      Personally I also have qualms about the general attitude of the entire medical profession about donations, either blood or organs. The entire medical chain makes billions off of donations. Yet they constantly fight any laws compensating donors, with the possible exception of strictly compensatory living and medical expenses for surrogate mothers. "How dare any lowlife feed at our table, even the scraps" seems to be the attitude.

      Yet these same munificent people will also fight tooth and nail to lay claim to the benefits of any discovery made from the unique biology of some patients. Consider the case, recently documented on PBS, of a cancer therapy derived from unique cells they took from an indigent black woman.

      While you're at it. think of the medicines derived by investigating the age-old herbal knowledge of primitive peoples. Go to the areas where they live, extract their healing knowledge, then return to the labs and derive a patentable medicine with no compensation of any kind to the people who were the source of the life-giving knowledge.

      Buncha fucking leeches.

    8. Re:Opt-out by psnyder · · Score: 1

      They're opt-out in many European countries today.

      And because of this, the number of donors in those countries is significantly higher.

      Dan Ariely talks about this "organ donation phenomenon" about 5 minutes into his TED lecture.
      Opt-in European countries: 4-28%
      Opt-out European countries: 86-100%

      If you want your citizens to donate more organs, you simply change the check-box at the DMV from an opt-in question to an opt-out question.

    9. Re:Opt-out by TubeSteak · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I'm guessing it's got to do with the taboo on death that still lingers - probably even moreso in the U.S.

      When I die, my body does not belong to the State.

      I'm inherently suspicious of anything designed to be opt-out...
      And exceedingly suspicious of any opt-out program designed to take property away from me or my kin.

      If you don't know, your corpse belongs to your estate unless it goes unclaimed for a certain period of time,
      at which point your corpse belong to the State (and the remains are useless for anything besides an anatomy lesson).

      --
      [Fuck Beta]
      o0t!
    10. Re:Opt-out by Mr.+Freeman · · Score: 1

      Hire a lawyer and write a will. Once you're dead that should suffice to override them. Even if all you put in it is "donate my fucking organs".

      --
      -1 disagree is not a modifier for a reason. -1 troll, flaimbait, redundant, overrated are NOT acceptable substitutes.
    11. Re:Opt-out by clarkkent09 · · Score: 1

      The thing is in the US (as far as I know in most states, probably all), you are asked that question whenever you obtain or renew your driver license. So we do have the decision for the vast majority of the people. So it is pretty simple: if you don't check that box when you renew your license, then you don't want to be a donor.

      --
      Negative moral value of force outweighs the positive value of good intentions.
    12. Re:Opt-out by houghi · · Score: 2, Informative

      Belgium has an opt-out. This results in sometimes people moarning in front of empty graves or people not knowing that their loved ones are cut to pieces. Also next of kin deciding not to do it, even though that is against the law.

      The advantage is that there is an opt-out law. The disadvantage is that many people are not aware of it and it is seldom discussed.

      --
      Don't fight for your country, if your country does not fight for you.
    13. Re:Opt-out by dbIII · · Score: 2, Interesting

      In Australia we went backwards.
      In at least one state there was a box to tick on the form to apply for or renew a drivers licence that said something like "do you want to be an organ donor". Most people agreed and had it written right there on the drivers licence for a doctor to read whether they were donating your organs or not.
      That changed and now there is a more complex process to sign up and a more complex process to identify potential organ donors.

    14. Re:Opt-out by ars · · Score: 1

      I posted this before, but I figured I'd scatter these replies everywhere so people will see them. There is no religious object to organ donation.

      The objection is to murder. Jews do not consider brain death to be death - only cardiac death. But most organ donation is done after brain death, but before cardiac death.

      And that's the problem. Not organ donation.

      --
      -Ariel
    15. Re:Opt-out by aussie_a · · Score: 1

      Organ donation is a relatively new concept. The first successful kidney transplant was in the 1950s (with everything before then a bit touch and go) and only worked because it involved identical twins.

      I do think that with such changes it is important to give society to come to understand and accept these changes and advances. America is currently up in arms over socialised medical insurance that is opt-out. It seems a bit unreasonable IMO to expect the same people to accept opt-out organ transplants.

    16. Re:Opt-out by aussie_a · · Score: 1

      The entire medical chain makes billions off of donations.

      Off organ donations? I'm going to need a citation for that, because if hospitals, or worse, doctors are getting paid for organ donations (beyond the time required to take out the organs or put them inside someone of course) then America's even more fucked up then I thought.

    17. Re:Opt-out by 10101001+10101001 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      When I die, my body does not belong to the State.

      When you die, you belong to no one. While you're alive, you can't transfer property rights over your body (one living person can't own another living person) and when you're dead you're not alive to agree to the transfer. Things like wills are constructions of the state to enforce property rights after you're dead. To that end, the state has a lot of power to possess things when you're dead. The fact that a vast majority of people might in fact want to put your body to good use when you're dead is, at least from a moral perspective, a good basis for supporting opt-out systems, anyways. It's not like, after all, you can't say "no" (and yes, clerical errors will likely occur, but there's no way to get around that since you'll be too dead to answer).

      I'm inherently suspicious of anything designed to be opt-out...
      And exceedingly suspicious of any opt-out program designed to take property away from me or my kin.

      Then you must free very suspicious of the legal system in general. Not only can it take your property, it can also take your liberty or your life. There's no real way to opt-out of it except leaving the State (and even then, extradition can get you); but, then, leaving the State also protects you from the opt-out donor system.

      If you don't know, your corpse belongs to your estate unless it goes unclaimed for a certain period of time,
      at which point your corpse belong to the State (and the remains are useless for anything besides an anatomy lesson).

      And estates are a by-product of State law (or a family with a lot of guns and a willingness to defend the property). This is, fundamentally, no different than estate tax laws. If you're really against the whole concept of your corpse being possibly used for organ donation, feel free to vote against it and opt-out if a law pass. But, if the vast majority wants an opt-out system, you don't much standing to complain, really.

      --
      Eurohacker European paranoia, gun rights, and h
    18. Re:Opt-out by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In Spain is the family who decides on the last moment if nothing was said by the deceased. Thats why Spain has the biggest donor ratio in the world.

      So it's a sort of opt-out.

      When family is faced with the option usually they say yes, becase a stupid death (usually because of a car accident) at least can benefit some people.

    19. Re:Opt-out by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "When I die, my body does not belong to the State."

      You might as well just let them have it - you won't be using it any more, and it isn't helping anyone if you just let it rot or burn it.

    20. Re:Opt-out by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      > And exceedingly suspicious of any opt-out program designed to take property away from me or my kin.

      I'm exceedingly suspicious of anyone who labels their (or their kin's) corpse as 'property'.

    21. Re:Opt-out by zippthorne · · Score: 1

      And I've never understood why you can only donate organs.

      If you could sell the rights to your organs (and will this right to your heirs), then there'd be a lot more availability. Why should the greedy hospitals and health care companies be the only ones to make money off of your organs?

      --
      Can you be Even More Awesome?!
    22. Re:Opt-out by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm banned from donating blood here because I'm gay, even though my blood is clean. I'm not allowed legally marry my partner because we are gay. But you want a system to take our body parts if we die suddenly and don't have all our business in order? (opting out etc.)

      I'd fight against an opt-out system vigorously. Unless people have expressed a desire to donate then show some respect and keep your hands to yourself.

    23. Re:Opt-out by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      By the time they get round to reading the will the organs will be useless - it's not something that can be decided 24 hours after death when the lawyers get involved - they need to know they can start divvying me up the moment they call it.

      That's why it's marked on my drivers licence and I carry a donors card. Hell if thought there was a chance that wouldn't be enough I'd tattoo dotted outlines round where my major organs roughly are so they get the hint...

    24. Re:Opt-out by Vectormatic · · Score: 1

      While I love and trust my family, they shouldn't be making that decision for me - nor should they be allowed to

      on this point i disagree. When i die, i will be a lifeless bag of meat/bones/organs. I personally do not care about what happens to my body after i die (ok, letting it rot in a dumpster would be a tad distasteful, but i wont notice). The people who survive me however, need to come to terms with my passing, and in the end those people are the ones i care about the most. They should be allowed to do with my remains as they see fit, so they will feel they did the right thing.

      Now i would off course think that donating my organs would be a noble desicion, but for instance donating my cornea's would leave my eyes horribly changed, and i would not want my survivors to have to look at a mangled corpse (unless they decide they are OK with it, off course).

      Anything that happens to me after death does not affect me anymore, but it does affect those i leave behind, so they should be the ones making the call

      --
      People, what a bunch of bastards
    25. Re:Opt-out by jlar · · Score: 1

      I agree entirely. Open a free market for organs (from dead people) and you will see the supply of organs explode. People who want to give away their organs for free can of course continue to do so. And the state authorities can of course continue to encourage people to donate their organs for free.

      The only alternative to a free market is shortages and coercion. Both when we are talking about bread and organs.

    26. Re:Opt-out by demonlapin · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Legally, once you die, your corpse belongs to your next of kin. You can write a will so that they get no money if they don't donate the organs, but you can't really force them to donate.

    27. Re:Opt-out by ObsessiveMathsFreak · · Score: 2, Insightful

      When I die, my body does not belong to the State.

      Well that makes you a selfish, heartless meanie and the modern media won't be inclined to give you much of a platform. So you may a well just stop talking while they get a weeping family who lost someone due to lack of organs to bawl until the next time slot. Once those tears start to flow, your cause is a good as dead. Which is fine anyway, because the majority is just going to vote to make your organs belong to them anyway.

      Isn't democracy grand.

      --
      May the Maths Be with you!
    28. Re:Opt-out by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      We live in a civilized society. That means, while you receive all the benefits of living with others, you must also give to others. Sometimes you may disagree with the giving part. Too damn bad. If stealing something from a dead man, especially something that none of his next of kin can use, means saving a life, it is just. No, you're body does not belong to the state to do whatever they want with, but if a life can be saved, none of your philosophies or beliefs should take precedence.

      You sound like a selfish rich man complaining about being taxed so that the poor can eat and orphans will have shelter.

    29. Re:Opt-out by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      yeah, because we all know your body would be filed away somewhere, with doctors needing to fill in forms in triplicate to get it. *roles eyes*

      It's not the State, genius, it's going to doctors who are going to use the parts to SAVE lives. You conservatives/libertarians are so damn selfish, even after death, it's ridiculous.

    30. Re:Opt-out by nidarus · · Score: 1

      Well that makes you a selfish, heartless meanie and the modern media won't be inclined to give you much of a platform

      I doubt that. Fox News is part of the modern media, and it fits their agenda like a glove.

    31. Re:Opt-out by mdwh2 · · Score: 1

      I think a bigger problem to be sorted out first is that even if a person's opted in, the family then overrule that because they're not comfortable with the idea.

    32. Re:Opt-out by misexistentialist · · Score: 1

      if the vast majority wants an opt-out system

      If the vast majority opts in to opt out there is strong evidence that they are brain-dead and candidates for harvesting, which will temporarily produce a surplus of organs, before the minority opposition becomes the new majority. In reality this "vast majority," however, is really a extremely tiny minority of the population who hold office and have either been bribed by the medical industry or who just get off on power.

    33. Re:Opt-out by geekoid · · Score: 1

      If you die and don't like having your organs harvested,. then feel free to complain.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    34. Re:Opt-out by Dog-Cow · · Score: 1

      I really don't think anyone is going to want a used penis.

    35. Re:Opt-out by Hatta · · Score: 1

      Why not? The state already owns your body when you're alive. Just try putting certain substances into it without permission, and you'll see how much control you have over "your" body.

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    36. Re:Opt-out by Myopic · · Score: 1

      The answer to your question is that the policy is not designed to maximize utility, but rather to protect the preferences of a minority position which carries some moral weight. Lots of people (not including myself) don't want their dead bodies hacked up, and our society gives a lot of weight to people controlling their own bodies (and other property) after death.

      I'm an organ donor, but much like with other public policies, I prefer the law to accommodate reasonable minority preferences. (Obviously, "reasonable" is a political determination.)

    37. Re:Opt-out by TheSync · · Score: 1

      If you want your citizens to donate more organs, you simply change the check-box at the DMV from an opt-in question to an opt-out question.

      The truth is that your organ donation checkbox does not require your relatives to carry out your desires.

      I think opt-out organ donation at the DMV is a good idea. I also think that a market in organs would be beneficial.

    38. Re:Opt-out by cybernanga · · Score: 1

      When you die, you belong to no one. While you're alive, you can't transfer property rights over your body (one living person can't own another living person) and when you're dead you're not alive to agree to the transfer.

      While I am alive, I can choose to donate my body to a University or Medical Facility for research purposes. They can't take possession (pun not intended) of it until I am dead, but after that it becomes the university's property. (If you don't believe me, try stealing a cadaver.)

      If I can donate my body to one organisation, I should be able to leave it to any organisation or person.

      --
      www.Buy-Proxy.com - A "buyer-driven" global marketplace.
    39. Re:Opt-out by zippthorne · · Score: 1

      I would add that I think your organs should be your own. Your heirs don't get to sell 'em unless you signed an appropriate document before you died. That document being, i think, a living will (since a regular will wouldn't get read until too late to harvest the organs.)

      Actually, I think your organ donor status should itself be a secret held in escrow until the moment death is declared. I don't trust doctors to hold only one person's well-being in their minds at the same time.

      --
      Can you be Even More Awesome?!
  10. awesome by story645 · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Maybe this will open up more discussion of the religious permissibility of organ donations, which is a topic that's nowhere near as black and white as some people make it out to be. Plenty of orthodox rabbis also say donating is permissible (as far as I've heard from members of the New York ultra-orthodox contingent) in a lot of circumstances, but their voices seem to get drowned out far too often. I'd love to see some real discussion of the topic, so while yeah the measure is radical, it's also kind of brilliant. It's also an interesting approach to tackling the religious/secular divide in Israel, which makes the American one look downright friendly.

    --
    open source modern art: laser taggi
    1. Re:awesome by chrb · · Score: 2, Informative

      Plenty of orthodox rabbis also say donating is permissible (as far as I've heard from members of the New York ultra-orthodox contingent)

      It has also been argued that trafficking in human organs on the black market and laundering the money is also religiously permitted (when it saves lives, apparently - the lucrative profits are completely coincidental)...

    2. Re:awesome by Bartab · · Score: 1

      I wish more trafficking in human organs was available. I wish I could come to a financial agreement to purchase a kidney for myself or a loved one, or sell a kidney. Or sell a portion of my liver suitable for transplant. Or sell a lung. Or sell bone marrow. I wish more people engaged in breaking the laws barring such activities, even if they also launder the money involved.

      Things get trickier for non-live transplants, but not insurmountably.

      --
      Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from a rigged demo.
    3. Re:awesome by story645 · · Score: 1

      t has also been argued that trafficking in human organs on the black market and laundering the money is also religiously permitted

      And the sane Orthodox people (including the ones living in/related to people in these communities) are all just as horrified by the Deal scandal as everybody else in America. I didn't say that Rabbis don't sometimes say really bad things are alright, (and honestly it's a much smaller minority than the news makes it out to be) just that they're often far more sensible than given credit for.

      --
      open source modern art: laser taggi
    4. Re:awesome by Rich0 · · Score: 1

      Yup - the argument usually goes that life and organs are priceless.

      In reality, priceless just means worthless.

      That said, I do believe that there are legal transactions people should not be allowed to agree to, such as selling themselves into slavery. Organ sales starts to go in that direction. I think they should be permissible in situations where the donation is not likely to have a substantial health impact on the donor (such as just about any situation where somebody is allowed to donate organs today).

  11. Many Orthodox Rabbis encourage organ donation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

    Israel has various religious sub-groups, and it's only in the extreme orthodox group (Haredim) that organ donation is problematic. In the moderate orthodox community some rabbis have suggested that it's an obligation to sign the donation card.

  12. Religious bullcrap is commonplace here by dushkin · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Oh yeah. It's everywhere.

    For instance around late March and early April we'll have passover. It's forbidden to eat anything yeasty or something like that on passover, so no beer, whiskey or more importantly: bread.

    See, I always bring a sandwich with me to work and eat at my desk. It's what I do. I like having my sandwich for lunch because I don't feel like heading to the kitchen. But now I'll have to find an alternative because my office is apparently supposed to be kept kosher for passover.

    Nobody honestly cares in my department, and not in any of the neighboring departments, and not my boss(es).

    How can I have my sandwich without bread? :(

    --
    o hai
    1. Re:Religious bullcrap is commonplace here by Al+Dimond · · Score: 1

      What kind of place do you work where the whole office is supposed to keep kosher? Unless you work for a religious Jewish organization that's kind of insane.

    2. Re:Religious bullcrap is commonplace here by TooMuchToDo · · Score: 1

      Lettuce wrap? Cuts down on calories too.

    3. Re:Religious bullcrap is commonplace here by dushkin · · Score: 1

      Pretty standard place... Many of us also work from home on Saturdays, which isn't cool in Judaism either.

      --
      o hai
    4. Re:Religious bullcrap is commonplace here by imunfair · · Score: 1

      I'm not Jewish, but I'm pretty sure you can get pitas(flatbread) without yeast - I think that was the whole point of the 'unleavened bread' thing in the Bible passover story?

      flatbread with a bit of butter inside, toasted and filled with tomato and cucumber slices is pretty tasty.

    5. Re:Religious bullcrap is commonplace here by deathbird · · Score: 1

      Kosher is HAAAARRRDDD. Try matzo or a wrap.

    6. Re:Religious bullcrap is commonplace here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In Israel, all government and other civil work places (including the IDF, hospitals, municipal agencies and such) and many large corporations (banks, credit companies, etc.) enforce this, making it impossible to eat bread there in passover.

    7. Re:Religious bullcrap is commonplace here by mike260 · · Score: 1

      You might also have mentioned that you live in Israel, dude.

    8. Re:Religious bullcrap is commonplace here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Switch to a ham & cheese sandwich for the pesach period.

    9. Re:Religious bullcrap is commonplace here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Use flatbread. Dur.

    10. Re:Religious bullcrap is commonplace here by geekoid · · Score: 1

      Bring sandvich to work. If anyone complain, shoot dem with Natasha. *
      Alternative:
      Bring your sandwich to work, if any one complains, sue them for discrimination.

      Forcing you to adhere to another persons religion is against the constitution. In fact, ti's the whole point of freedom of religion.

      Unless you not in the US, obviously.

      *TF2 reference, my bad.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    11. Re:Religious bullcrap is commonplace here by Myopic · · Score: 1

      My advice is to make and enjoy your sandwich quietly. In the unlikely event that somebody asks you about it, straight up lie to their face and insist that the bread is made specially without yeast. If they doubt you and point out that your bread sure looks leavened, just continue to lie, tell them it's not. (And if they ask you why you are eating a ham sandwich, lie again and tell them it's chicken. And if they ask you about the slice of cheese, lie again and tell them it's -- uh -- hummus or something.)

      In my estimation, the lie is less of a sin than allowing yourself to be needlessly controlled by nonsense. Don't make a stink about it, don't invite controversy -- just do your thing peacefully, and use baldfaced lying to defend yourself if necessary.

      This advice is modeled after The Invisible Man: "overcome them with yeses"; YES this is unleavened bread; YES I am sure of it; YES this is kosher meat; YES I am staying kosher for Passover.

    12. Re:Religious bullcrap is commonplace here by Blakey+Rat · · Score: 1

      Just use pita bread.

  13. cheap christian louboutin shoes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
  14. Sounds fair by WiiVault · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I may be missing something, and feel free to tell me. But I have no problem with donors being higher on the list. It makes sense to reward altruism in society and this certainly fits the bill. Sure some religions might interject, but just like organ donation religious practices are a choice and like every choice they carry consequences. That's not to say non-donors shouldn't get organs, but they should not be the priority.

    1. Re:Sounds fair by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I would totally be in favor of denying organs to non-donors.

    2. Re:Sounds fair by nedlohs · · Score: 1

      That's just silly.

      Giving donors preference makes sense.

      Throwing away a perfectly good organ because there are no donors who need it and are a match for transplantation purposes is ridiculous. The non-donor got lucky in that case no need to let them die just to spite them.

    3. Re:Sounds fair by slimjim8094 · · Score: 0

      Sounds great to me. I'd extend it to blood donors, with quantity donated moving you further up.

      Humans aren't altruistic in general. It's nothing to be ashamed of - we're programmed to think of ourselves first. Aligning altruistic acts and self-preservation sounds like a great way to encourage altruistic behavior.

      --
      I have developed a truly marvelous proof of this comment, which this signature is too narrow to contain.
    4. Re:Sounds fair by keeboo · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Humans aren't altruistic in general. It's nothing to be ashamed of - we're programmed to think of ourselves first. Aligning altruistic acts and self-preservation sounds like a great way to encourage altruistic behavior.

      There's nothing altruistic when you do something expecting to be rewarded somehow.

    5. Re:Sounds fair by Krahar · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Generally more blood is stored than is needed for patients to not start dying. So tying receiving blood to blood donation would result in a situation where the doctor has a cheap, easy and viable way to save his patient, but he then does not because it has been decided some people don't deserve it. That's just nasty.

    6. Re:Sounds fair by Antony-Kyre · · Score: 1

      Well, to want an organ but not willing to be a donor sounds hypocritical.

    7. Re:Sounds fair by laron · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I'd be wary of that. There are a lot of people who can't donate blood for many reasons and I wouldn't like to put them at a disadvantage.

      If you have to take heavy medication that makes your organs unsuitable for example, it shouldn't affect your priority to receive organs. It would turn your consent to donate into an empty formality of course.

      --
      "Beware of he who would deny you access to information, for in his heart he dreams himself your master."
    8. Re:Sounds fair by NeuralAbyss · · Score: 1

      Sounds great to me. I'd extend it to blood donors, with quantity donated moving you further up.

      I'd support this, provided we eliminated the discrimination present in various countries' blood donation rules. It's still legal for groups such as the Red Cross to discriminate against homosexuals, reinforcing the view of risk-taking sexual behaviour being prevalent only in the homosexual community, and not the populus at large.

    9. Re:Sounds fair by EnglishTim · · Score: 2, Insightful

      There's a sufficiently large section of the population that cannot give blood that such a suggestion would be unworkable.

    10. Re:Sounds fair by 93+Escort+Wagon · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Sounds great to me. I'd extend it to blood donors, with quantity donated moving you further up.

      I'd support this, provided we eliminated the discrimination present in various countries' blood donation rules. It's still legal for groups such as the Red Cross to discriminate against homosexuals, reinforcing the view of risk-taking sexual behaviour being prevalent only in the homosexual community, and not the populus at large.

      This is just silly. My wife was a floor nurse for many years. She had a needle stick while taking care of an AIDS patient in the early 1980s, and has been excluded from giving blood ever since. Why on earth should someone like her should be lower in the queue than some blowhard from Slashdot? Have you ever taken care of people dying from a yet-little-understood disease?

      --
      #DeleteChrome
    11. Re:Sounds fair by A1rmanCha1rman · · Score: 1

      Sounds like a sensible and fair measure, until it comes under test itself by extenuating circumstances, like someone who has a significant involvement in the greater good (e.g socially, scientifically or in a critical peace process) but not a registered organ donor being passed over in favour of one simply because that's the new rule.

      As usual, this will probably go unnoticed until some pretty serious consequences emerge in hindsight.

      There are always two sides to the coin.

      --
      I get up, I get down...
    12. Re:Sounds fair by khallow · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Well, to want an organ but not willing to be a donor sounds hypocritical.

      Unless, of course, being a potential donor makes you more likely to die. The dark side of this sort of policy is that someone decides whether you live or die. If you have a lot of good organs, they might well decide to let you die in favor of a sicker patient.

      A couple more points to consider. The bias is unlikely to result in many more organs. The pool of needy organ recipients isn't particularly large compared to the total population and such people aren't likely when they die to be healthy enough to provide organs. Second, hypocritical people have just as much right to live as anyone else.

      The altruism motive sounds adequate to me. I don't like it since I think we'd be better off economically and morally paying money to donors (and of course, their inheritors when appropriate). It also provides an avenue for doctors to make life and death decisions based on moral judgments. Still, there's a bunch of people who need organs and a bunch of people who could provide them. It's better than nothing, I suppose.

    13. Re:Sounds fair by evilbessie · · Score: 1

      It should be done on the willingness to donate, not actual donating, as that would be somewhat counter productive, only putting donor organs into those who donate them...

    14. Re:Sounds fair by JaumPaw · · Score: 1

      Actually, that's very hard to do here in Israel.
      There's a disagreement between the doctors and the rabbis about the determination of death - some of the organ donations are made impossible by it because the body is kept too long after the (from the medical point of view, for it to be useful in a transplant) moments of death. But we have pretty damn doctors here (though grossly overworked) so guess it balances it a bit.
       

    15. Re:Sounds fair by dziman · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Should a smoker dying of lung cancer get a second pair of lungs before a person that is not a smoker and did not choose to be an organ donor, but instead has lung cancer due to second hand smoke? That's a nice gray area for you.

      Or would you like it a bit more simple:

      A child whose parents are not organ donors, and can't choose because the child is not old enough, is dying of a disease that has destroyed her lungs. Should the smoking lung cancer patient that selected "organ donor" get the lungs before the child?

      These are hard choices.

    16. Re:Sounds fair by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      So in this system, the sensible choice would be to get on the organ donor list, then drink, smoke and make generally sure nobody wants your organs...

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    17. Re:Sounds fair by houghi · · Score: 1

      You could still register as an organ donor. The fact that they won't use it is their decision, not yours.

      Oh and in Belgium EVERYBODY is an organ donor by law.

      --
      Don't fight for your country, if your country does not fight for you.
    18. Re:Sounds fair by laron · · Score: 1

      Unless, of course, being a potential donor makes you more likely to die. The dark side of this sort of policy is that someone decides whether you live or die. If you have a lot of good organs, they might well decide to let you die in favor of a sicker patient.

      AFAIK preparations for donations (determination of tissue types etc) only start after a patient has been declared brain-dead.
      And look at the bright side: Organ donors don't get buried alive.

      The pool of needy organ recipients isn't particularly large compared to the total population and such people aren't likely when they die to be healthy enough to provide organs.

      A lot of healthy people die suddenly in accidents.

      --
      "Beware of he who would deny you access to information, for in his heart he dreams himself your master."
    19. Re:Sounds fair by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'd be wary of that. There are a lot of people who can't donate blood for many reasons and I wouldn't like to put them at a disadvantage.

      If you have to take heavy medication that makes your organs unsuitable for example, it shouldn't affect your priority to receive organs. It would turn your consent to donate into an empty formality of course.

      Good point.

      In fact many people with serious disease will be barred from donating organs, including a range of auto-immune disorders. I'd include myself in that category, as I used to be a organ donor card-carrier, and a regular blood donor, until I was diagnosed.

      Fortunately I'm not likely to need a new organ, but does it make sense for chronically ill people to go to the end of the line, in favour of someone with an acute illness or trauma?

    20. Re:Sounds fair by laron · · Score: 1

      A child whose parents are not organ donors, and can't choose because the child is not old enough, is dying of a disease that has destroyed her lungs. Should the smoking lung cancer patient that selected "organ donor" get the lungs before the child?

      IMHO children should always be prioritized like organ donors, regardless of their parent's choices. But maybe that's just me.

      --
      "Beware of he who would deny you access to information, for in his heart he dreams himself your master."
    21. Re:Sounds fair by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      evolutionary psychology makes a good case for the theory that that's all altruism ever was - a subconscious or instinctive herd altruism is a practical solution to "prisoners dilemma" / "tragedy of the commons" type situations where individual short term gain _appears_ to be more attractive than possible long term benefits for the average individual,.

    22. Re:Sounds fair by Bartab · · Score: 3, Informative

      Two points:

      1) Cancers are almost never 'cured' by transplantation. If your organ is failing due to a cancer, be prepared to die regardless of the reason for the cancer. This is largely because the new organ would almost certainly also be a loss.

      2) At least in the US, Children are already at the top of the list.

      --
      Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from a rigged demo.
    23. Re:Sounds fair by Bartab · · Score: 1

      A lot of healthy people die suddenly in accidents.

      Not enough. Europe has adopted an "opt-out" policy for donations, unlike the US. This means that an individual must make a legal declaration that they are not willing to donate organs, otherwise their organs are harvested if they become available and are usable.

      Europe still has people die on waiting lists for every organ. Including kidney, which can be done live and every healthy person can donate one.

      --
      Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from a rigged demo.
    24. Re:Sounds fair by Bartab · · Score: 1

      Unless, of course, being a potential donor makes you more likely to die.

      In fact, you're (very very slightly) more likely to survive if you are a known donor. This is because an effort to bring your body to a condition where your organs may be harvested might in fact make conscious recovery possible where without such efforts you might have been written off as unsurvivable.

      The dark side of this sort of policy is that someone decides whether you live or die. If you have a lot of good organs, they might well decide to let you die in favor of a sicker patient.

      Which is brain death. A position where "somebody decides whether you live or die" no matter what. Including for such reasons as financial.

      --
      Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from a rigged demo.
    25. Re:Sounds fair by renoX · · Score: 1

      >> If you have to take heavy medication that makes your organs unsuitable for example, it shouldn't affect your priority to receive organs. It would turn your consent to donate into an empty formality of course.

      Not really: your organs may be used for medical study for example, which is also a *life or death* issue, even if it's less direct: insufficently trained doctor equal more risks for the patients..
      'consent for donation' is all what matter, not the state of the organs themselves.

    26. Re:Sounds fair by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Seems simple enough: Just fix those not eligable to donate at precisely the median level of 'credit.'

    27. Re:Sounds fair by goose-incarnated · · Score: 0, Troll

      You don't say whether or not your wife was infected

      --
      I'm a minority race. Save your vitriol for white people.
    28. Re:Sounds fair by nedlohs · · Score: 1

      Why would that matter?

      I wouldn't expect such a person to get preferential treatment now anyway. And if they do now, then why would their special case treatment change anyway?

    29. Re:Sounds fair by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It makes sense to reward altruism in society and this certainly fits the bill.

      It's by definition not altruism if there is a reward or expectation thereof. Not that I disagree with this principle, though.

    30. Re:Sounds fair by galadriel · · Score: 1

      Do you even know what it takes to end up an organ donor? You have to die such that the organs are still viable. Generally it's a seriously traumatic injury which leaves the brain dead, but the organs still functioning on life support. Death due to illness or old age doesn't allow for organ harvesting, which is why organs are so scarce despite all the people who *are* willing to donate.

      What is all this crap about "letting" people die in order to harvest their organs? In order to even make the decision about whether to donate organs, there isn't any life left anyway. It's simply a matter of allowing the organs to be collected, or not.

    31. Re:Sounds fair by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And for good reason, the rate of HIV is something like 60x as prevalent in the gay community as in society at large. It is also a relatively small community. Collecting blood from gays is the equivalent of getting crude oil from tar sands - it is a resource that is there, but there are much better choices for obtaining the same thing unless we come up with new extraction techniques.

    32. Re:Sounds fair by GargamelSpaceman · · Score: 1

      He who has the lungs makes the rules! Feel the POWER OF RIGHTEOUS MIGHT coursing through your veins!

      --
      ...
    33. Re:Sounds fair by geekoid · · Score: 1

      Is there someone who can't donate for medical reason but can accept a donation?

      I'm not talking about crazy religious crap.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    34. Re:Sounds fair by geekoid · · Score: 1

      Maybe the parents should have elected to be a donor? I mean if they really cared.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    35. Re:Sounds fair by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually your ability to accept and not destroy a donated organ should affect your priority to receive it. If your on some liver-destroying medication and need a new liver, then you shouldn't get one before someone who isn't going to wreck it with their other medical conditions.

    36. Re:Sounds fair by macaddict · · Score: 1

      Sounds great to me. I'd extend it to blood donors, with quantity donated moving you further up.

      Well, except that blood transfusion tends to be a bit more immediate than getting a new organ. Can you imagine getting admitted to the ER, with major blood loss after a car accident, and the nurses having to take the time to look up how many pints you've donated before they'll give you a transfusion and take you into surgery? (What if you are in another city or state? Will this info be available immediately to every hospital) And then they have to do a comparison to everyone else in the area served by the local blood supply to make sure nobody (in this ER or in any other local hospital) has donated more than you before they give you the blood? All the while, the patient is pumping blood all over the ER floor from his injuries while his exact spot in the 'blood transfusion priority list' is determined. Yeah, that's just bloody brilliant! You should be a hospital administrator!

      It's not the same situation with blood. There is a finite number of organs that can be donated (you can only donate one liver), whereas blood is a renewable resource. Which is why people in need of organs end up on waiting lists. We should not need 'waiting lists' or 'priority lists' for blood transfusions, since people can give blood repeatedly (regular donors make up for some people being unable to donate) and blood can be stored.

    37. Re:Sounds fair by Myopic · · Score: 1

      Right. A person with a bad liver can still be an organ donor -- for the rest of their organs. In fact, I bet the person could still volunteer to be a liver donor, but then the liver itself would be declined. Thus the person would still qualify.

    38. Re:Sounds fair by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There are a lot of people who are not allowed to donate, for no medical reason at all. I'm gay, I've always practiced safe sex, I'm tested negative for HIV and other STDs, but I'm not allowed to donate blood or marrow unless I lie about my sexuality. I don't see why I'm more of a risk than the heterosexual sex tourist next door. Also to think that they trust their testing procedures so little is scary.

    39. Re:Sounds fair by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is just silly. My wife was a floor nurse for many years. She had a needle stick while taking care of an AIDS patient in the early 1980s, and has been excluded from giving blood ever since. Why on earth should someone like her should be lower in the queue than some blowhard from Slashdot?

      Do you mean your run-of-the-mill blowhard, or one that gave blood?

    40. Re:Sounds fair by khallow · · Score: 1

      Do you even know what it takes to end up an organ donor?

      Yes.

      What is all this crap about "letting" people die in order to harvest their organs?

      It's pretty straightforward. Accident victim comes in barely alive, but with a bunch of viable organs. Letting them die (or maybe just killing them outright) may allow you to save a few people and/or make a bunch of money. Only problem is if you get caught. Given that medical professions who murder on the job have been among the most prolific and enduring of serial killers, I really don't see that sufficient accountability is in place to prevent such things.

    41. Re:Sounds fair by Vellmont · · Score: 1


      Should a smoker dying of lung cancer get a second pair of lungs before a person that is not a smoker and did not choose to be an organ donor, but instead has lung cancer due to second hand smoke? That's a nice gray area for you.

      How is it gray? This isn't some reward for moral superiority, it's an attempt to create more donors. You claim to be making some sort of "good guy A vs good guy B" choice. Wrong. The incentive of getting ahead in the queue is to benefit EVERYONE, not the "morally correct".

      These are hard choices.

      Only because you've taken entirely the wrong idea here. I'm just so incredibly tired of the morality card being played. There's more to life than blame, buddy.

      --
      AccountKiller
    42. Re:Sounds fair by LordVader717 · · Score: 1

      Blood donation is about saving people's lives, not politically correct bullshit or opposing 'prevalent' views. It's also a bit of a push calling it discrimination. It isn't anybody's *right* to have their blood taken and nobody is required to accept a donation.
      And the simple fact of the matter is that certain groups have higher risks than others. Most of them are far lower risk than homosexual men by the way.

  15. How about an option by rm999 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Instead of 2 choices (donor or non-donor), how about a third category: donor with preference to other donors. This takes the decision away from the government and to the owner of the organs.

    I'm sure some people would be willing to donate to anyone, but the majority would choose the new third option.

    1. Re:How about an option by TooMuchToDo · · Score: 1

      +1 Excellent Idea

    2. Re:How about an option by mike260 · · Score: 1

      Very good idea.

      But giving people any choice over who gets their organs is problematic - orthodox Jews would no doubt see it as state-sanctioned religious discrimination, since they claim that being non-donors is a requirement of their religion. The strawman argument would be "Why not also let donors bar Arabs from receiving their organs?"

    3. Re:How about an option by Rogerborg · · Score: 1

      Very amusing - that Arabs would ever get treated in an Israeli hospital. Maybe in a veterinarian's surgery.

      --
      If you were blocking sigs, you wouldn't have to read this.
    4. Re:How about an option by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Already exists in the US. I've been a member for almost 10 years http://www.lifesharers.org/

    5. Re:How about an option by galadriel · · Score: 1
    6. Re:How about an option by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This seems the most reasonable option.

      Thus it is doomed to failure.

    7. Re:How about an option by Rich0 · · Score: 1

      I'm sure some people would be willing to donate to anyone, but the majority would choose the new third option.

      This sounds like the subject of a psychological experiment. However, instead of playing games with tokens or money handed out by researchers, they are playing it with their own organs.

      Perhaps this one will be called the "Donor's Dilemma..."

    8. Re:How about an option by Myopic · · Score: 1

      Could the donor also make other stipulations, such as that the organs can't be used for a Republican, or for an abortion rights advocate, or for a Jew? Those are honest questions -- would you allow only the one exception (other organ donors) or does the principle apply more widely?

  16. Not always against religious law by miasmatic · · Score: 5, Informative

    Organ donation is NOT always against Jewish law (Halacha). In fact there is almost always a way that it is totally fine and even further, there are interpretations that suggest that not being an organ donor is a violation of Halacha! Please see http://hods.org/ for a very good observant Jewish organization that seeks to make more orthodox Jews organ donors.

    1. Re:Not always against religious law by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      Ha, Troll, you say.

      References
      here and here.

      While they don't want to emphasize the point, the latter reference recommends: "However, because of some dissenting Halachic rulers, it is advised to consult with a rabbi before making a decision."

    2. Re:Not always against religious law by shilly · · Score: 1

      Right then.

      The first reference you gave discusses multiple reasons why there *is* no halacha against donating to non-Jews. It also emphasises that technical discussions of halacha should not be used to disguise simple racism. You risk looking like that injunction applies to you, too.

      The second reference is anonymous -- being on Wikipedia, and contains not a single reference for any of its assertions. I'll stick with HODS, I think.

    3. Re:Not always against religious law by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Religious people seem to go to a lot of trouble to find loopholes and work around their own religious restrictions and traditions. Muslims with their "mortgage"s to get around the ban against charging interest, Jews with the various devices to get around the work bans on the sabbath. Christians coming up with reasons to not stone homosexuals.
      Maybe the New Age folks have the right idea when they just pick and choose arbitrary parts from various religions that appeal to them personally. :)

  17. some inaccuracies by MajSh · · Score: 2, Informative

    Organ donation doesn't conflict with the Jewish religion, in fact there is a religious law that authorizes it under few minor limitations. Also, the law is widely supported by most Israelis, there's a very small orthodox minority that doesn't support it because the public they represent has a low percentage of organ donor card holders and not due to a conflict with religion.

  18. Why Am I Not Surprised by hyades1 · · Score: 0

    So all these old geezers who are most likely to find themselves in need of a new kidney or liver think it's just fine to receive one, but they use their influence to stop "devout" followers from donating them. As far as I'm concerned, if you don't have a signed organ donor card, you don't deserve to receive a transplanted organ. No exceptions. And for that matter, other members of your family shouldn't be allowed on the recipient list either.

    It's long past time we stopped allowing practitioners of primitive superstition to dictate the workings of a modern society.

    --
    I've calculated my velocity with such exquisite precision that I have no idea where I am.
    1. Re:Why Am I Not Surprised by icebraining · · Score: 4, Insightful

      And for that matter, other members of your family shouldn't be allowed on the recipient list either.

      That's fucking stupid. Why the hell should they be punished for someone else's decision?

    2. Re:Why Am I Not Surprised by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And for that matter, other members of your family shouldn't be allowed on the recipient list either.

      Even if they're all registered donors?

      Do you always shoot from the lip?

    3. Re:Why Am I Not Surprised by hyades1 · · Score: 1

      Added incentive.

      --
      I've calculated my velocity with such exquisite precision that I have no idea where I am.
    4. Re:Why Am I Not Surprised by Myopic · · Score: 1

      Probably because he's a troll, that's why.

  19. Orthodox Jews are not against organ transplants by davidl71 · · Score: 5, Informative

    Most Orthodox Rabbis are not against organ transplants. They disagree about the determination of death. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Organ_donation_in_Jewish_law

    1. Re:Orthodox Jews are not against organ transplants by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, but if the definition of death under one interpretation of Jewish law is incompatble with transplants, in practice it means that it is against transplants. Quoring from the Wikipedia article you link to:
      "Another major debate around organ donation has to do with what is considered death. One opinion is that death is indicated by the irreversible cessation of breathing, and the other opinion is that death is indicated by the irreversible cessation of a heartbeat, which is the majority, long standing accepted opinion. Those who hold this way believe that any other definition of death e.g. brain death or brain stem death, is incorrect and removing organs from such an individual is tantamount to murder."

  20. That's a good idea by nedlohs · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Why should you get a organ from someone who just died if you aren't willing to give the same if you die?

    Except for the group of people who have something that means they aren't candidates for organ donations but are candidates for organ transplant (I don't know if there is such a pair, but you don't take organs from people with aids or numerous other illnesses) - they are going to get the short end of the stick. Though it's a simple exception to add.

  21. Re:This law is WRONG by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    In Israel they are all Jews!

  22. Seems fine... by Entropius · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Normal rules of ethics dictate that the commons should be more willing to help someone out if they're willing to donate to the commons too. This is related to the idea behind the GPL. If you have two friends who are short a buck for lunch, you're more likely to give your only dollar to the one who's more likely to spot you when you come up short.

    Just because organ donation is a matter of life and death doesn't mean that it plays by any different rules than "ordinary" ethics -- it just means the stakes for getting it right are that much higher. The commons should encourage people to contribute /to/ the commons, thereby enriching everyone, and rules like this are just one way to do it.

    And this sort of ethics is independent of anyone's primitive superstitions. Superstitions are fine -- believe whatever you want -- but don't expect reality to change to suit them.

  23. Re:This law is WRONG by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    In parts of Palestine they're all Jews too!

  24. Free Market solution by kainosnous · · Score: 1

    The problem here is not a religious one, but an economical one. There is a greater demand than supply, and thus scarcity: the fundamental reason for economics. The trouble with a government trying to regulate the distribution of goods is that they must make decisions that will hurt some people and help others. Basically, they have to define what is "fair", and it is usually an arbitrary decision. Most often, the decision is left to who can bribe the politicians the most, and therefore relating back to money anyways.

    According to the article, there seems to be some occasions where they don't mind donating an organ and therefore may be willing to give something in return. Of course, if this had anything at all to do with religious beliefs, then anybody who believes God is powerful enough to enforce a rule will believe He is powerful enough to provide when that rule is followed. Anything else seems to me more like a social club.

    --
    There are 10 commandments: 01)Thou shalt love the Lord Thy God 10)Thou shalt love thy neighbour as thyself.Matt22:34-40
    1. Re:Free Market solution by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 2, Insightful

      A "free market solution" to the problem would, eventually, inevitably boil down to some bankrupt schmuck selling his heart to buy his family a few years of reprieve. Free market isn't moral not just - merely "efficient".

    2. Re:Free Market solution by demonlapin · · Score: 1

      So you'd prefer that the bankrupt schmuck and his family starve? People make decisions like this all the time - ask a coal miner whose dad was a coal miner and died of black lung, but who goes underground anyway because it pays well. You're right that markets don't have a moral component, but so what? Amorality is not immorality.

    3. Re:Free Market solution by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      So you'd prefer that the bankrupt schmuck and his family starve?

      No. The problem is that, when he has such a "way out", the ones in power will use it to justify screwing him further. You know, "What? No, he doesn't need any welfare. He's not poor. He can always sell his liver if it's too tough!".

  25. Good thinking! by SpaghettiPattern · · Score: 1

    Apparently this initiative faces resistance from Orthodox rabbis, who hold that organ donation is against religious law.

    There's a shortage of donors as it is where too many are dragging their feet when it comes to registering. This new rule seems to make the "game" fairer.

    But how I understand it, orthodox who explicitly refuse donating organs apparently want to dictate rules for matches they don't even participate in. What's it then? Do they want be in front of the queue for accepting organs? Play the game or leave the table. Another fine example of religious representatives imposing themselves, interpreting the word of God.

    --

    I hadn't the slightest objection to his spending his time planning massacres for the bourgeoisie... (P.G. Wodehouse)
    1. Re:Good thinking! by NoxNoctis · · Score: 1

      There's a shortage of donors as it is where too many are dragging their feet when it comes to registering. This new rule seems to make the "game" fairer.

      I've never really seen it as a game myself. To me it is just a way to turn your own grief in to someone's joy. Is that really so bad? While I do not possess a donor card, I've made my wishes perfectly clear to those who would be making decisions on my behalf should something happen.

      But how I understand it, orthodox who explicitly refuse donating organs apparently want to dictate rules for matches they don't even participate in. What's it then? Do they want be in front of the queue for accepting organs? Play the game or leave the table. Another fine example of religious representatives imposing themselves, interpreting the word of God.

      Yes, yes, and yes. You have to remember that the religious leaders in biblical times were the law. Even if how they interpreted the word of God was horribly inaccurate and plainly only for their benefit, people went with it. Even in modern times, these "leaders" still seem to be nothing more than a cleaned up version of a mob boss.

      --
      "You're awefully cute, but unfortunately for you, you're made of meat."
    2. Re:Good thinking! by SpaghettiPattern · · Score: 1

      There's a shortage of donors as it is where too many are dragging their feet when it comes to registering. This new rule seems to make the "game" fairer.

      I've never really seen it as a game myself. To me it is just a way to turn your own grief in to someone's joy. Is that really so bad? While I do not possess a donor card, I've made my wishes perfectly clear to those who would be making decisions on my behalf should something happen.

      Well, my view on society should mostly be a game played with sportsmanship. I know it isn't but it should IMHO and that's my take on life. I'll spare /. a long and corny analogy but at the end of the game you want to leave in a joyful spirit.

      Donating your organs is very sporty. As is not humiliating a much weaker adversary. As is not imposing your tactics and strategies onto other teams.

      --

      I hadn't the slightest objection to his spending his time planning massacres for the bourgeoisie... (P.G. Wodehouse)
  26. Orthodox rabbis? by slimjim8094 · · Score: 1, Informative

    Orthodox Judaism considers it obligatory if it will save a life, as long as the donor is considered dead as defined by Jewish law (from Wikipedia)

    What gives? Can anyone shed light on this?

    --
    I have developed a truly marvelous proof of this comment, which this signature is too narrow to contain.
    1. Re:Orthodox rabbis? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      The primary issue surrounds heart donation, which must be done when the heart is still beating. Some Orthodox authorities consider the continued beating of the heart to constitute life, and for this reason they prohibit heart donations. Others accept the more widely held position that cessation of brain function constitutes death, this makes it possible to donate the heart after the brain has died but while it is still beating.
      Donation of most other organs can take place even after the heart has stopped beating, that is more widely accepted by many orthodox rabbis.

      There's alot of literature about this issue at http://hods.org/

      It is certainly hypocritical to refuse to donate but want to receive. I think this legislation is brilliant because it makes people live with the consequences of their action or inaction.

    2. Re:Orthodox rabbis? by phantomfive · · Score: 1
      Heh.....this is a classic slashdot comment. You wanted to know the answer, weren't afraid of the effort necessary to find it on the internet, and STILL weren't willing to read the article. Here's the answer FTA:

      Yosef Sholom Elyashiv takes a different view, and he is one of ultra-Orthodox Jewry's most influential leaders, claiming 100,000 followers among Israel's 6 million Jews. Elyashiv forbids organ donation before cardiac death, but allows his followers to receive lifesaving donations....

      Most leading Orthodox rabbis -- as well as Israeli law -- agree that a person dies when his brain-stem stops functioning. A minority opinion, endorsed by Elyashiv, holds that as long as a person's heart beats he or she is alive and therefore the organs cannot be harvested. Donation in Israel after cardiac death is rare and only done in special circumstances.

      If I were into crafts and Slashdot paraphernalia I would print your comment and frame it.

      --
      Qxe4
    3. Re:Orthodox rabbis? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

      Under Jewish (Orthodox) Law you are only allowed to donate body parts that will save a life. So a heart is OK, but a cornea is not. So on the Israeli donor form, you tick the boxes of which body parts you are prepared to donate

    4. Re:Orthodox rabbis? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Good to know, I'll make sure to add you to my list of "people who are giant pricks to anyone with legitimate questions".

    5. Re:Orthodox rabbis? by tsirkin · · Score: 1

      Well,the _ donation _ is not a problem .The problem is :
      When do you consider a person dead ,so you can use his organs?
      This is _ not _ a simple question to ask.
      The current knowledge in medicine says the moment of death is the "brain death".
      However this is not so simple.
      If there _ is _ a possibility of a person to be back alive after a "brain death" then taking his organs is
      pratically killing him ,right?
      This "moment of death" is the real Judaism problem .
      While doctors say it is OK to take your organs ,how do you make sure of two things:
      1. The person is _ really _ dead (when we think of a person as dead?)
      2. Why would you trust _ any _ doctor on such a thing?
      So ,there are two main opinions in Judaism:
      1. The moment of death is the brain death ,_ but _ to make sure that person is really dead
            there is a need of more then just one doctor to decide .Let say we need two doctors to say
            that and one _ none _ doctor to see that the two other guys are not going to just kill somebody
            for money.
            There is a law in preparing actually in Isarel that makes all this to happen.

      2. The moment of death is the moment of heart actually stopping.
              This is _ against _ of current science ,however I would not trust a science for this, science changes.

      Note however that if an organ was _ already _ taken than the person is already dead anyway and thus
      the "receiving an organ is OK under religious law".
      Just trying to clear thing out.

    6. Re:Orthodox rabbis? by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      It's not a legitimate question when the answer is easily found by anyone willing to look for it.

      --
      Qxe4
    7. Re:Orthodox rabbis? by Demize · · Score: 1

      The most common interpretation is the one held by most contemporary societies. Brain death = death. However, there are minor groups who believe:

      1) A person is dead only when they irreversibly stop breathing. This is based on the passage where God first breathes into Adam. They also define life as starting as "at first breath".

      2) A person is dead only when their hearts irreversibly stop. This probably based on common sense from most societies back before we could do proper brain scans.

      The problem arises because all the good organs are irreparably damaged when oxygen no longer reaches them. This the problem with both minor interpretations above. The controversy is that:

      1) There is nothing that would lead to an interpretation that receiving organs from a "murdered" person is wrong. Rejecting the organ doesn't undo the deed and, in any case, there is now a potential for a saved life as a result of the act they believe immoral. So they accept the organs, which makes other

      2) People think that they're getting a "free ride". Essentially, while these potential organ-donors are behaving semi-altruistically, they believe those who chose not to be donors are violating a social contract. So while they can't force people to give up their own organs, they are trying to pass legislation where there is now a negative consequence for not participating. This irritates

      3) Altruistic donors, who do not care a whit about the argument and just want to save lives. They don't want their organs being used as pawns in a political/religious game when the whole reason they signed the consent form was to help those in the most need. The problem is that those who have the most need would be bumped below those who did not need the organ as much.

    8. Re:Orthodox rabbis? by Roman+Kalik · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Read the article first linked, it is actually clear enough. The issue is *not* whether or not organ donation is good or bad (in Judaism, it's good, and expected, by definition - it saves lives, and human life is above pretty much the rest of the religion in Judaism). The issue is about how the organs are recovered, and unlike how the article claims it, it isn't merely an issue with Rabbi Eliashiv being the minority view. The problem is entirely with a conflict between the medicinal and religious definition of death. Judaism generally holds that the heart must stop beating for complete death to occur. Current medical standards hold that brain death is more than enough to recognize death. So donating organs that don't require you to, you know, continue to function as a living person, those were never in question. The problem is that the donor card gives Israel's medical authorities permission to harvest your still-warm body (has to be as close to death for the organs to be useful). In fact, the problem is further complicated when some doctors bend the definition of brain death, in itself a definition that is not clear across international borders, and which saw particular misuse in the UK. That donor card is basically an encouragement to keep the heart beating and, for that matter, possibly skim the correct definition of death. To balance the need of one dying man against the need of many people needing organs. And that's a fairly problematic and delicate situation. The matter in Israel would have been resolved by now if medical authorities were willing to reassure potential religious Jewish donors that they won't have their bodies harvested in a matter not in accordance with their beliefs, by allowing the formation of decision boards that would also comprise of Rabbis - said boards would ultimately decide on organ harvesting, which would help mitigate fears religious donors have of having such matters done in a manner against their beliefs. That's all there is to it. But last time such a board was (almost) formed, medical authorities broke the accords, refusing to let anyone in on deciding such matters as time of death other than themselves. But the thing is - death isn't just a physical matter. And so long as there are people who don't hold purely physical beliefs, they're unlikely to put their final fate completely and utterly in the hands of those who have a completely different set of core values and beliefs - no matter how well-meaning those people may be.

    9. Re:Orthodox rabbis? by demonlapin · · Score: 1

      If there _ is _ a possibility of a person to be back alive after a "brain death"

      If there's a possibility of coming back, they're not brain dead. Determination of brain death is not quite like verifying the absence of cardiac activity - it's usually fairly involved.

    10. Re:Orthodox rabbis? by shilly · · Score: 1

      From HODS:

      "Since the Talmud (Nedarim 64b) declares suma kamet (a blind person is akin to a dead person), Rabbi Israel Unterman, former Chief Rabbi of Israel, and other Rabbinic authorities have ruled that in saving someone from blindness it is as if you were actually saving someone from a life-threatening disease. Accordingly, Rabbi Unterman ruled that donating corneas to give a person sight is halachicly considered saving a life. In addition, the surroundings of a blind person are dangerous and may possibly cause death. There have been several studies that document the association between blindness and early mortality (Study 1, Study 2)."

  27. I'm a donor. Are you? by TheMiddleRoad · · Score: 1

    If you're not a donor, you're a douche bag. Sign the card or whatever it is in your state. Let your loved ones know. You might save a life.

  28. It's Not Just The Rabbis by b4upoo · · Score: 1

    There are nuts in every religion. Those Orthodox rabbis need to get control of their minds and stop with these ancient laws and notions. Being able to receive an organ but not donate one is flat out loonie tunes. After all when you get an organ the bad organ gets tossed in the trash so your corpse is not completely you when you eventually pass away. Some of these rabbis are as off the wall as the Moslem idiots who blow themselves up.

    1. Re: It's Not Just The Rabbis by PHPfanboy · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Those Orthodox rabbis need to get control of their minds and stop with these ancient laws and notions.

      Er, then they'd be out of a job. Would turkeys vote for an early Christmas?

      --
      29 mpg. YMMV.
  29. The other side by physicsphairy · · Score: 1

    Will a healthy "non-donator" be put far behind, for example, other persons likely to die/reject the transplant? If the free-loaders are a small minority one would think it would be better to keep the emphasis on getting organs to the people who stand the best chances of being able to use them, rather than necessarily who has put in an equitable stake.

    For that matter, although these people may not have volunteered their organs, if they pay taxes they are still contributing to Israel's socialized health care program. How much does that count for sharing the burden of these expensive procedures?

    And will these people still have a reasonable chance of coming up on the waiting list, or are their prospects pretty much nullified? Seems to me that death is a bit harsh of a penalty for not signing up. You may as well just void the opt-out bit entirely. Surely you would rather they be annoying whiners about it than potentially dead.

    Disclaimer: I'm 100% for letting people bear the natural consequences of their choices, even when that's death, and would never want to be forced to sign up for anything. The above simply represents some objections I feel a less libertarian individual might raise.

  30. Register to donate organs in the USA online! by Hadlock · · Score: 3, Informative

    Click here for a list of state agencies that handle organ donation:
     
      http://organdonor.gov/donor/registry.shtm
     
    It only takes about 30 seconds to register online.

    --
    moox. for a new generation.
    1. Re:Register to donate organs in the USA online! by Antiocheian · · Score: 1

      How much time does it take to unregister should you decide against it at a latter time ?

    2. Re:Register to donate organs in the USA online! by Eponymous+Coward · · Score: 1

      Seriously? Why would you decide against it? What's the downside?

    3. Re:Register to donate organs in the USA online! by IndustrialComplex · · Score: 1

      Seriously? Why would you decide against it? What's the downside?

      That's a good question, but just because it is unlikely, or we can not immediately find a downside, that doesn't mean that you shouldn't have the option.

      --
      Out of modpoints but really liked a post? 1BDkF6TtmmeZ3yqXbz9yhdYVqRYnwFoXDj
    4. Re:Register to donate organs in the USA online! by Wyatt+Earp · · Score: 1

      If you've had an illness that makes you decide your organs might be harmful to others.

      Like me, three cancers.

      Of if you've been overseas and injured or had a blood transfusion that might not be 100% safe.

    5. Re:Register to donate organs in the USA online! by Eponymous+Coward · · Score: 1

      Oh wow, I'm sorry to hear about your cancers.

      Good point though. That's an angle I never thought of.

    6. Re:Register to donate organs in the USA online! by Wyatt+Earp · · Score: 1

      I was wounded and got blood overseas, so I can't donate blood in the US, also I had blood donation before HIV screening so that puts me out there with three strikes ;)

    7. Re:Register to donate organs in the USA online! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There are those who believe that signing up to be an organ donor makes it more likely that you will be allowed to die if your organs can save the lives of others. There are people who want to be kept alive by all means possible, even after any possibility of resuscitation, and they may fear a doctor who is looking at them as a body bank to be harvested as soon as possible rather than a patient whose needs are to be respected. Mind you, I'm not one who believes that way, but I know a few who are and I understand their concerns.

      Also, certain religions bar the practice of allowing your body to be cut up and its useful parts harvested. In most of those religions, it's also not OK to receive said harvested donations, so there's a certain balance at work.

      Regardless, this should be a clear case of "my choice to make". And I have, as evidenced by the donor card in my wallet. My sincerest hope is that parts of my body can be used to improve the lives of some strangers after I'm done with it. Well, my SINCEREST hope is that I'll never be done with it, but we know that's not going to happen. So I go with what I can realistically hope for.

      But I would not choose to force that choice on anyone else, even if it meant their death resulted in the extension of my life as opposed to merely their death.

  31. devil-get_advocate() by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Troll

    I never understood why organ donation is opt-in rather than opt-out.

    I can understand having religious convictions not to be a donor but the default ought to be "your organs are up for grabs"

    People don't just oppose organ donation for religious reasons. Harvesting cadavers for scrap parts to extends the life of people whose time has come? Some people oppose this ridiculous cult of life, trying to extend this miserable existence by partially resurrecting the deceased and stagger on through life for another year or two with a zombie organ or two.

    Now, surgeons are already arguing for extracting organs from the dying before they are dead, so that the spare parts are nice and fresh. All that pressure a surgeon is under when a nice and beloved hot chick lies in critical condition, and I'm in there for an in grown toenail... why not let the smelly curmudgeon die to save her. But sure go ahead and pillage my dying carcass. Don't waste the scraps, you could make a nice stew.

  32. Re:I'm a donor. Are you? by Dr.Syshalt · · Score: 1, Interesting

    You might save a life.

    ...Or you might lose your own life in some circumstances as well.

  33. Simple... by meekg · · Score: 1

    Religious law may allow it, but religious people won't donate - it's a cultural thing. They still want the organs when they need them though.

  34. Mod parent up by tsadi · · Score: 1

    I agree. This is a very good idea!

  35. To clear thing out (I hope) by tsirkin · · Score: 1

    Well,the _ donation _ is not a problem .The problem is :
    When do you consider a person dead ,so you can use his organs? In other word ,the moment of death.
    This is _ not _ a simple question to ask.
    The current knowledge in medicine says the moment of death is the "brain death".
    However this is not so simple.
    If there _ is _ a possibility of a person to be back alive after a "brain death" then taking his organs is
    pratically killing him ,right?
    This "moment of death" is the real Judaism problem .
    While doctors say it is OK to take your organs ,how do you make sure of two things:
    1. The person is _ really _ dead (when we think of a person as dead?)
    2. Why would you trust _ any _ doctor on such a thing?
    So ,there are two main opinions in Judaism:
    1. The moment of death is the brain death ,_ but _ to make sure that person is really dead
          there is a need of more then just one doctor to decide .Let say we need two doctors to say
          that and one _ none _ doctor to see that the two other guys are not going to just kill somebody
          for money.
          There is a law in preparing actually in Isarel that makes all this to happen.

    2. The moment of death is the moment of heart actually stopping.
            This is _ against _ of current science ,however I would not trust a science for this, science changes.

    Note however that if an organ was _ already _ taken than the person is already dead anyway and thus
    the "receiving an organ is OK under religious law".
    Just trying to clear thing out.

    1. Re:To clear thing out (I hope) by MichaelSmith · · Score: 1

      This "moment of death" is the real Judaism problem

      Its a problem everywhere. My wife's uncle had a haemorrhage in his brain almost a month ago. EEG shows that half his brain is dead. Doctors say that if they remove life support he will die immediately. His family doesn't want to remove life support. But is he really alive at all, if he can't communicate or take a breath without machinery?

    2. Re:To clear thing out (I hope) by tsirkin · · Score: 1

      Exactly!

    3. Re:To clear thing out (I hope) by tsirkin · · Score: 1

      Exactly the problem!
      You are not going to say - that he is dead,right?
      But you don't know if he is alive.
      So ,what now?

    4. Re:To clear thing out (I hope) by demonlapin · · Score: 1

      Legally, he is alive. He's not brain-dead. His family may choose to withdraw supportive care, in which case he will die rather quickly, or may choose to continue it, in which case he will remain alive but comatose until such time as he heals or dies. This is a fairly common situation. After a month without improvement, I'd strongly suggest withdrawing.

  36. Re:This law is WRONG by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    because it might just save the life of a few jews.

    I suggest we better pass a law that forbids organ donations to jews.

    That's no joke.

  37. Re:I'm a donor. Are you? by dziman · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Not being an organ donor does not make you a douche bag. People may have valid reasons for choosing not to be a donor. Some of those are religious or ethical, others might be medical.

    Would you want to accept an organ from a person that has a communicable disease and that disease would come to you from a donated organ?

    Would you want to accept an organ from a person that has not taken good care of that organ in their body?

    The organ you receive could actually kill you if your body outright rejects it without appropriate post operative medical care. Should we give organs to people that mark themselves donors, but are unlikely to obtain reasonable post operative medical care?

    Some people may be better donors than others! Would they re-prioritize organs to people that are more likely to be better organ donors than people that are not as good organ donors? For example, lets say that I'm fairly healthy except for this kidney I have that won't work. Would I get the kidney before a person that is less healthy than myself? Which types of organs are more desirable? Age matched? Younger? Older? Larger? Smaller? Is there a grading scale for organ donor-ability?

  38. Humor in title by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    > "In Israel, Potential Organ Donors Could Jump the Queue"

    I have a strange feeling that whoever chose this title is an American who has been in Israel, it seems to be poking a bit of fun at Israeli "queuing culture".

  39. I agree to donate my brain. by JaumPaw · · Score: 2, Funny

    (get away, you zombies! it's not food!)

  40. Thank G-d for that by Chrisq · · Score: 4, Funny

    Jewish law doesn't prohibit anything involving pigs except for eating them, and praying in places where you can smell them.

    Thank G-d for that. I was worried that the Rabbi wouldn't like it if he found out I was screwing them.

    1. Re:Thank G-d for that by linuxrocks123 · · Score: 1

      DAMN I wish I had mod points. Good one, man :)

      --
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    2. Re:Thank G-d for that by GargamelSpaceman · · Score: 1

      Jews, who don't believe in vowels, ( Hebrew lacks them I believe ) always smurf them when spelling God. If you look real close, like with a magnifying glass or a microscope, you will see the - is actually a microfiche 'sm-rf', and if you get an electron microscope, you will see that THAT dash actually says 'sm-rf'. There is much speculation as to dashes beyond that.

      --
      ...
    3. Re:Thank G-d for that by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well that is issur (forbiden) on the more general area of having sex with well animals...

  41. Re:I'm a donor. Are you? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Yeah, and you also might save the life of someone who goes on to take someone elses.

    Fuck off you ignorant dick, the philosophy of organ donation isn't as simple as "you're a douche if you don't do it".

    Some of us don't like the concept of helping to keep up artificially an already overpopulated species and are happy with the concept that when we die, we're gone, and we're not saved by some donation and even if we were might end us in a state where we can't contribute anything to society, but may consume a disproportionate amount of resources.

    The human overpopulation problem is a big deal- it's the reason for many wars, it's the reason for climate change and other pollution related problems, it's the reason for starvation in many places and it's the reason for many social ills in some places also (i.e. higher crime). Keeping people alive artificially well beyond their means is part the reason for it.

    It's ironic that people like you have such an ignorant, simplistic view of how you might save someone's life through organ donation, completely missing the point that you're responsible in the long run for many more deaths.

    The real douchebags are people too fucking stupid to realise that their do-gooder attitudes actually cause the problems they think they're saving against.

    So no, I'm not going to sign, and I'll continue to actively campaign against opt-out organ donation, because it's just one of many factors responsible for more deaths and more problems amongst the human population in the long run. The human population needs to slow down it's growth, death is a natural check on that, it's sad, but it's an essential part of the natural cycle. People should be able to live in a world where they don't have to suffer the problems of overpopulation, why would I want to contribute to a world where they can't?

    Come back and tell me it's okay to donate your organs when you're been to somewhere like certain parts of Africa and Asia, where there are entire families of people near starving to death and having to work in conditions where they suffer and sometimes lose limbs or lives just so that some guy in the US whose been kept alive through organ donation can continue to live his lifestyle where he consumes daily what an entire such family might consume in a month.

    So again, organ donation isn't as simple as "you're a douche if you don't do it". It's a far bigger, far more complex issue than that, and a lot of people are perfectly justified in not being interested in organ donation.

  42. It is not a sin to give an organ by Gumbercules!! · · Score: 1

    It is *not* a sin to give an organ, this is a mistake in the parent summary. Jewish law does *not* forbid giving an organ.

  43. Slippery slope by VShael · · Score: 3, Insightful

    When you start putting an acceptable face on preferential medical treatment, it's the thin end of the wedge.

    How long before this perfectly acceptable and seemingly reasonable tier-ring system is tweaked some more?
    Perhaps soldiers get preferential treatment? I can see that meeting little public resistance.
    Then soldiers and their immediate families.
    And if soldiers, why not fire-fighters or even other medical staff?

    Or politicians?

    At what point do people enter a job market, or start a political campaign, just to help a loved one move up a few spaces on the transplant waiting list?

    And if it did extend as far as politicians, what with campaign contributions being as messed up as they are, how is that any different than buying the organs in the first place?

    1. Re:Slippery slope by AK+Marc · · Score: 2, Insightful

      When you start putting an acceptable face on preferential medical treatment, it's the thin end of the wedge.

      "Preferential medical treatment" is called triage and is practiced everywhere. The wedge has sailed. People receive according to need. Adding in another in a long line of tie-breakers wouldn't affect that one bit. Or didn't you know that there is already a setup just like you claim is "starting" with this, and that system has been in place for many years?

    2. Re:Slippery slope by the_raptor · · Score: 1

      Soldiers in the US have the VA so do get preferential medical treatment over your average non-insured person. Also in any kind of large scale medical emergency (epidemics etc) first responders and those necessary for maintaining essential infrastructure do get preferential treatment. And even on organ waiting lists most of them are hardly first come first served, there are a whole host of subjective factors that alter your place on the list (eg if you are an old fat smoking alcoholic enjoy never getting an organ). Steve Jobs essentially bought himself an organ by shifting residence to get on a much shorter list. Rich people can just go to India and buy a kidney with no legal repercussion in a lot of place (and other organs are available, ones that are essential for life).

      --

      ========
      CINC, 4th Penguin Legion
    3. Re:Slippery slope by demonlapin · · Score: 1

      The VA, contrary to popular belief, does not cover all former soldiers. To get free care in the VA, you have to have served in combat (and, IIRC, during a recognized conflict). There must be a connection between your activities in the service and the medical care you need, as well. Otherwise, it's just another hospital, and they will send bills.

    4. Re:Slippery slope by VShael · · Score: 1

      Wow. Someone modded that troll.

      I think we need a new "-1 : I really don't like this post" because some people don't appear to know what a Troll post is.

    5. Re:Slippery slope by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I wouldn't have a problem with preference for anyone that risks their life for the general public, probably not families, and politicians should be last

    6. Re:Slippery slope by Myopic · · Score: 1

      It's not the existence of a preference, it's basing the preference on need versus a moral judgment. I don't think the OP is saying triage is a moral hazard, nor is there anything he wrote that suggests he is unaware of triage. But do you normally base triage on a checkbox on the patient's ID card? No, that's outside our normal triage procedures.

      (But it still might be a good idea.)

    7. Re:Slippery slope by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      It's not the existence of a preference, it's basing the preference on need versus a moral judgment. I don't think the OP is saying triage is a moral hazard, nor is there anything he wrote that suggests he is unaware of triage.

      He bashed "preferential medical treatment" and implied that it doesn't happen today (by saying that this would start the practice). It happens today. Either he's ignorant of the issues, or he's a liar because he is stating something which implies the opposite of the truth.

      If he were to say "I understand this practice happens now, but solely for medical reasons and for no other reason" then It would have been a little more clear, but I still would have had issue where there are non-medical considerations in treatment. Such as, if a cop and a robber shoot each other at night, and both need surgery, but there is only one surgeon at the hospital at that moment, I would expect that the officer would get the immediate surgery while the robber waits for a surgeon to respond to the page. Or in wartime where the triage was supposed to take side into account only in case of a tie, but there are cases where the same-side was treated first when the injury was less severe. So has this issue come up before? Yes. So to imply that this is the start of a slippery slope is false. Either he knows it to be false, and is thus a liar, or he doesn't know, and thus is ignorant and needs to be educated.

    8. Re:Slippery slope by Myopic · · Score: 1

      Either he's ignorant of the issues, or he's a liar because he is stating something which implies the opposite of the truth.

      Or he didn't write with perfect clarity. That's what I suspect, but if you actually think he was intentionally lying, or didn't even understand basic triage, then in that case your reaction isn't overwrought.

  44. Pedantry alert by Mathinker · · Score: 1

    Jewish law doesn't prohibit anything involving pigs except for eating them, and praying in places where you can smell them. Get your facts straight before you blathering on about the corruption of a religion you don't know much about.

    I agree that the post you replied to is trollish, but have to berate you for your very, very limited imagination. This is the Internet Era, no? The last time I checked, bestiality with pigs was still a big no-no in Judaism (and no, I wasn't checking because of personal interest --- it's a figure of speech, get over it). In addition, I believe that most rabbis would also forbid torturing pigs (unless it might save a human life). Hmm, what else. If/when the practice of animal sacrifice will become active again, only kosher animals are permitted to be sacrificed. Jews can wear shoes made from pig leather, but not on Yom Kippur. It's forbidden to murder someone by dropping a pig on them from a great height. You are forbidden buying and selling pigs on the Sabbath.

    Actually, the list is, well, endless....

    BTW for the next time this comes up, you might want to cite: http://engforum.pravda.ru/archive/index.php/t-216072.html

  45. Re:I'm a donor. Are you? by dargaud · · Score: 2, Insightful

    If you're not a donor, you're a douche bag

    Well, I used to be very pro-organ donation, but having seen 'the market' at work in the US, I now feel pretty disgusted. Larry Hagman (a known alcoholic) getting a new liver thanks to his money while others wait in line ? What about Steve jobs, did he have to wait for years in line ? If all it takes is to be rich and famous, then no, I'm sorry, I don't want to participate. Let natural selection run its course.

    --
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  46. Help, help, I'm being oppressed by MillionthMonkey · · Score: 5, Interesting
    There was a story a couple months ago about a bunch of cyclists in Brooklyn who tried to repaint some bike lanes there. The city had sandblasted them away at the request of Hasidic Jews who complained that bike lanes attracted female cyclists with huge boobies.

    Groups of bicycle-riding vigilantes have been repainting 14 blocks of Williamsburg roadways ever since the city sandblasted their bike lanes away last week at the request of the Hasidic community.

    The Hasids, who have long had a huge enclave in the now-artist-haven neighborhood, had complained that the Bedford Avenue bike paths posed both a safety and religious hazard.

    Scantily clad hipster cyclists attracted to the Brooklyn neighborhood made it difficult, the Hasids said, to obey religious laws forbidding them from staring at members of the opposite sex in various states of undress. These riders also were disobeying the traffic laws, they complained.

    Two cycling advocates were apprehended by the Shomrim Patrol, a Hasidic neighborhood watch group, as they repainted a section of bike lane at 3:30 a.m. yesterday, but when cops arrived, no one was arrested and no summonses were issued, police said.

    "These people should apply for a job at the DOT," neighborhood activist Isaac Abraham said of the repainting. "You put it on, they take it off -- and they will probably do this again."

    A Department of Transportation spokesman said: "We will continue to work with any community on ways we can make changes to our streets without compromising safety."

    A source close to Mayor Bloomberg said removing the lanes was an effort to appease the Hasidic community just before last month's election.

    Abraham contends the bike lanes put children at risk of getting hit by cars or bicycles as they exited school buses.

    But Baruch Herzfeld, who has tried to bridge the gap between hipsters and Hasids with a bike-rental program, said safety is not the issue so much as xenophobia.

    "They don't want the hipsters in their neighborhood," he said. "It's like in Howard Beach back in the day when they didn't want black people in the neighborhood."

    The cycling advocacy group Transportation Alternatives has not taken sides in the dispute.

    But bike lane or not, "cyclists have a right to be on Bedford Avenue," said Wiley Norvell, a group spokesman.

    (First of all, to clear up the nitpick: "But you don't need a bike lane to ride down the street!" It's there to keep people from running you over, not to give you legal sanction to use the street.) What's amazing here is that an American city outside Utah acquiesced to demands that a piece of public infrastructure be degraded, on the basis of someone's religious objections to women who are not covered. It was a boneheaded decision to enforce values of a single religious group upon the public at large.

    In Israel, where I presume there are no bike lanes, there is clearly not the messy separation of church and state that exists here (for now). Maybe it's fine there for religous law to dictate secular law. But there isn't much organ donation in Israel because of people's religious beliefs. An "opt-out" system isn't discriminatory in any way, but the same sort of people who got the City of New York to sandblast its bike lanes are the ones who will claim discrimination.

    1. Re:Help, help, I'm being oppressed by Solandri · · Score: 2, Insightful

      What's amazing here is that an American city outside Utah acquiesced to demands that a piece of public infrastructure be degraded, on the basis of someone's religious objections to women who are not covered. It was a boneheaded decision to enforce values of a single religious group upon the public at large.

      Why is it amazing? That's the way the U.S. is set up to work - to strike a balance allowing geographical differences in local community standards to coexist with larger scale government standards. The founders never wanted the entire country to be a homogeneous mass with everything being the same everywhere. They wanted some wider principles and and guidelines for the entire country, but the flexibility for local regions (initially States) to do things differrently they way they wanted. So anything not covered by Federal laws are subject to State laws. Anything not covered by State laws are subject to county ordinances. Anything not covered by county ordinances are subject to city ordinances. Anything not covered by city ordinances are subject to smaller official community organizations (e.g. school boards).

      If there are no federal, state, county, or city regulations requiring that bike lanes be present, the local community is free to decide, based on the social standards of the majority of the local residents, whether or not their streets should have bike lanes. If a community is largely comprised of Hasidic Jews who don't want bike lanes, then as long as a higher layer of government doesn't require bike lanes, they are free to do with their community as they wish. That their reason is based on their religion is irrelevant. As long as it doesn't violate a law or ordinance, people can make decisions for their community based on science, religion, Oprah, phase of the moon, or the voices they hear in their head. If someone feels the majority has gone too far and is violating the rights of the minority, they bring it up in court.

      This is what allows right-wing communities to have ordinances which they are more comfortable with (e.g. no nudie bars). And allows left-wing communities to have ordinances which they are more comfortable with (e.g. mandatory recycling pickup). The legal environment set up by these local norms live and die based on people voting - both at the ballot and with their feet (moving into or out of the community). Laws at the local level which don't work get filtered out, with a lesson learned not to try it at a higher level. Laws which do work at the local level get noticed as a good idea, and get tried out at a higher level.

    2. Re:Help, help, I'm being oppressed by gv250 · · Score: 1

      ... bike lanes attracted female cyclists with huge boobies.

      Where can I buy some paint?

    3. Re:Help, help, I'm being oppressed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If there was ever a just cause for a naked-clyclist protest demonstration, this was it.

    4. Re:Help, help, I'm being oppressed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      The issue in the Bedford Ave. bike lane was not female cyclists with large busts nor female (or male) cyclists in skimpy clothes. This is something that some troublemakers threw out as a distraction. The complaint was about parking (and double-parking especially). If you can't 'stand' your vehicle in the bike lane legally (mind you people all over nyc park, double-park, stand and otherwise obstruct bike lanes all the time in my personal experience) then you are blocking the street. Please see http://www.vosizneias.com/45171/2009/12/18/williamsburg-ny-new-york-citys-largest-bicycling-advocacy-group-decries-planned-nude-bike-protest/ and note especially comment #3 which reads in part "Fact: Since they started the bike lanes in Williamsburg traffic during the day is a nightmare, "

      See also the interview with Paul Steely White, director of Transportation Alternatives, in "Der Yid" which is a Williamsburg newspaper serving the Hasidic community. Quoted at http://transalt.org/newsroom/media/4205

    5. Re:Help, help, I'm being oppressed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It is amazing that the government listens to resident concerns? I guess so, but you are actually upset about this rare occurrence?

    6. Re:Help, help, I'm being oppressed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Scantily clad hipster cyclists attracted to the Brooklyn neighborhood made it difficult, the Hasids said, to obey religious laws forbidding them from staring at members of the opposite sex in various states of undress. These riders also were disobeying the traffic laws, they complained. "

      Removing safety devices from the street in order to subject others to your ridiculous religious ideas is just that, ridiculous. If you have a retarded law about not looking at people with fewer clothes than you, then maybe you need a little self control.

      Forcing others to change their behavior so you can feel good about yourself is fucking retarded.

    7. Re:Help, help, I'm being oppressed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    8. Re:Help, help, I'm being oppressed by MillionthMonkey · · Score: 1

      Oh I'm sure; it was a tongue in cheek statement. Rabbis can't be patrolling for boobies everywhere.

  47. Not the only criteria by Sycraft-fu · · Score: 1

    I don't think anyone is saying it'd be the ONLY criteria, just that it should be one that gets considered. There's all kinds of factors that go in to who gets to be where on the list as it is. I think this is a fair one to add. If you are willing to donate your organs, then it is fair to give you a better chance at getting organs.

    No matter what, we have to have some criteria currently since demand outstrips supply and any of the current solutions to that are unacceptable. One thing that might help is to encourage more people to be donors. This might help do that.

  48. Slashdot: Eliminate that junk at the bottom. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I wish Slashdot would eliminate that junk at the bottom of the page.

    Anyhow, the problem with frying bacon is that the water from the meat explosively exits into the fat, spraying the fat. The bacon burns only when the water is all gone.

    Anyhow, don't eat animals. You should minimize your trust in the processed food supply. For example, see Bribes Let Tomato Vendor Sell Tainted Food.

    1. Re:Slashdot: Eliminate that junk at the bottom. by themaneatingcow · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Anyhow, don't eat animals. You should minimize your trust in the processed food supply. For example, see Bribes Let Tomato Vendor Sell Tainted Food.

      So what you really mean is "don't eat fruits and vegetables"...

    2. Re:Slashdot: Eliminate that junk at the bottom. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why is it that vegans, vegetarians, and christians always try and force their beliefs on everyone else?

  49. Re:Help, help, I'm being repressed by MillionthMonkey · · Score: 1

    ...not oppressed, whoops.

  50. Or, very badly reasoned by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    "... Judaism is actually a very well reasoned religion..."

    Kissinger, Henry (1923- ), Jewish-American politician: "Any people who have been persecuted for two thousand years must be doing something wrong." Quoted in: Walter Isaacson, Kissinger - A Biography, p. 561.

    1. Re:Or, very badly reasoned by njfuzzy · · Score: 1

      That Kissinger quote just goes to show that Jews were the originators of the same sort of guilt now commonly associated with Catholics.

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    2. Re:Or, very badly reasoned by TheRaven64 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Practicing usury in a society that considered it immoral, for much of that time. Christians and Muslims didn't lend money, because they weren't allowed to charge interest on it, so there was no incentive for them to do so. Jews did. Everyone hates the person they owe money to, especially when they start making unreasonable demands, like eventual repayment. This didn't stop the Christians from borrowing money from the Jews - no one else would lend to them - but it didn't exactly endear the Jews to the rest of the population.

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    3. Re:Or, very badly reasoned by paiute · · Score: 1

      "Any people who have been persecuted for two thousand years must be doing something wrong."

      On the other hand, any people who have survived two thousand years of persecution might be doing something right.

      Re rabbinical decisions on organs etc.: One of the nice things about Judaism is that if you are in a congregation and your rabbi says things you disagree with, you can lobby to have him or her replaced or you can go find another temple to join. Try that in the Catholic Church.

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    4. Re:Or, very badly reasoned by ISoldat53 · · Score: 1

      Same thing works in the Baptist Churches. Hence all of the varieties of Baptist Churches.

    5. Re:Or, very badly reasoned by AndersOSU · · Score: 0

      Everyone who's alive today's ancestors have survived thousands of years of persecution.

  51. Loopholes by gd2shoe · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Rich and arrogant Jews* have been doing this forever. A quick glance through the New Testament is proof of this. (Even if one doesn't hold it to be scripture, it really is ancient.) Rich people of all religions seem to do it, but wealthy Jews seem to have a knack for it.

    *(With very strong emphasis on "rich and arrogant". One of my closest friends from High School is a practicing Jew and I have no patience for antisemitism.)

    I'm not sure what drives the transplant double standard. Reiterating ancient nonsense** that doesn't reasonably stem from scripture (but is tradition) is forgivable, even understandable. Making up fresh contradictions is only amusing when lives aren't on the line.

    **(It happens sometimes. I heard some today in my church. Let's stay calm, please.)

    The following (from the article) is probably part of it:

    But it has also raised resistance from within Israel's ultra-Orthodox Jewish minority... Most leading Orthodox rabbis — as well as Israeli law — agree that a person dies when his brain-stem stops functioning. A minority opinion, endorsed by Elyashiv, holds that as long as a person's heart beats he or she is alive and therefore the organs cannot be harvested. Donation in Israel after cardiac death is rare and only done in special circumstances.

    It's still a double standard. If you can accept such a donation, you can give such a donation. I agree with you: God certainly knows where that organ came from. (He also won't blame recipients who were not conscious when the decision was made. etc.)

    (Most transplants in Israel are done while the donor's heart is still beating!?!?! Am I misreading this?)

    Final disclaimer: I'm posting while quite tired. I know I shouldn't. The above certainly contains mistakes. Perhaps egregious ones.

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    1. Re:Loopholes by Steve525 · · Score: 1

      ...Rich people of all religions seem to do it, but wealthy Jews seem to have a knack for it.

      *(With very strong emphasis on "rich and arrogant". One of my closest friends from High School is a practicing Jew and I have no patience for antisemitism.)

      Uhm, in your first sentence that I quoted you are, indeed, specifying that people who are Jewish are worse than other groups in this regard. One might consider judging a whole group like that to be prejudiced

      I agree with the sentiment that you should get as you give, and that someone shouldn't expect donations if they aren't willing to give them. Dogma be damned. I don't think that Jews as a whole (or even just the wealthy ones) are any worse than other group in this regard.

      As far as loopholes go, there is a cultural tradition for Jews to read, discuss, debate, and interpret the meaning of their laws. This can lead to some pretty bizarre practices, but how they follow their religion is up to them.

    2. Re:Loopholes by Fnkmaster · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Orthodox Jews have a legalistic interpretation of their holy writings, i.e. principally the Old Testament. This leads them to look for loopholes within their own religious writings. This search for loopholes isn't a characteristic of rich and arrogant Jews, but rather of Orthodox Jews, perhaps specifically those who are arrogant enough to think that what man wrote in a book is more important that the intentions that an omniscient God should be fully aware of. This seems very silly to me, but I'm a scientist and a geek.

      Other sects of Judaism, such as the Reform and Conservative movements in the US that represent a majority of American Jews, tend to look at their holy writings as part of their culture, not writings to be interpreted literally. These groups view God through a more modern lens and tend to put aside some or all of the legalistic framework in favor of a more charitable interpretation of God as distinct from the writings of man in the Bible. These groups aren't so obsessed about finding loopholes in their religious texts, since they acknowledge that ancient practices have to be adapted to modern life.

      You can't paint all Jews with one brush on these sorts of things, just like you can't with all Christians. In fact, because Judaism is considered to be "born in" to those born Jewish, many people are considered Jews by the Jewish faith who are for all intents and purposes agnostic or atheistic.

      I'd lump myself into the boat of "American cultural Jews" - I practice the culture of my religion, have passover dinners, tell the stories, can read Hebrew and speak a bit of Yiddish passably, and plan on passing that culture down to my children. But I don't believe in an omnipotent God, or believe that if there is such a God he is disjoint from our universe and unknowable to us, and that good and bad behavior should be motivated by a working ethical framework, not religious fear.

      And I am an organ donor. Because it's the right thing to do and because when I'm dead I won't need 'em no more. Even if I believed in God, I see no reason he would object to organ donation. In any case, the question the Orthodox Jews are dealing with seems to be about when a person can be considered dead - I fail to see why their religious scholars don't admit the limits of their expertise and acknowledge that this is a question better determined by medical science and the families of the deceased than by themselves.

    3. Re:Loopholes by gd2shoe · · Score: 1

      Uhm, in your first sentence that I quoted you are, indeed, specifying that people who are Jewish are worse than other groups in this regard. One might consider judging a whole group like that to be prejudiced

      I knew that would be too tempting for somebody.

      My church places a heavy emphasis on proselyting. As I believe the teachings of my church, this makes perfect, logical sense. On the other hand, I'm not blind to the fact that we have more irrational Bible thumping zealots harassing society than the average religion. (The leadership try to avoid it, but individuals make their own choices.)

      By your logic, I might be considered prejudiced against my own religion.

      (Note that I went out of my way to emphasized the "rich and arrogant", a combination that is never healthy. Note also that "knack" doesn't imply behavior, but ability and sometimes predisposition. Many street corner magicians have a knack for petty theft, even if they've never stolen anything: "Is this your watch?")

      It might be said: Prejudice is as prejudice does. Do you assume that a specific person of a given culture/race/religion is going to behave in a fashion you consider unacceptable? That assumption leads you to action, and is half of the root of prejudice. The other half is the us-versus-them mentality. If broad observations equated prejudice, you would need to apply the term to the profession of anthropology (who would generally be insulted by the accusation).

      I agree with the sentiment that you should get as you give, and that someone shouldn't expect donations if they aren't willing to give them. Dogma be damned. I don't think that Jews as a whole (or even just the wealthy ones) are any worse than other group in this regard.

      Sorry if that transition caught you. I didn't mean to imply that Jews were the only ones with this issue, or that money was involved in this particular problem. I was responding to the parent post in general terms first (the level he was on), and then went more specific to the main article.

      As far as loopholes go, there is a cultural tradition for Jews to read, discuss, debate, and interpret the meaning of their laws. This can lead to some pretty bizarre practices, but how they follow their religion is up to them.

      True. Hence: "Making up fresh contradictions is only amusing when lives aren't on the line." Generally, I give a very wide berth to allow people to live their religion as they choose. Their rights end where someone else's begins. That's the only basis for debate here (and elsewhere).

      --
      I won't join Slashcott. OTOH, If Beta goes live, I just won't be back until it's fixed. Sorry Dice.
    4. Re:Loopholes by gd2shoe · · Score: 1

      ... perhaps specifically those who are arrogant enough to think that what man wrote in a book is more important that the intentions that an omniscient God should be fully aware of...

      Ah, but an Orthodox Jew would tell you that man did not author the book. God himself did. Men just recorded it for him. Every word must therefore be perfect. It's how they get themselves twisted up in their silly little tangles - a great many Christian religions do too, for that matter.

      Other sects... tend to look at their holy writings as part of their culture, not writings to be interpreted literally.

      Many Christians do too. I find it sad, really. (Not the setting aside of ancient interpretations, but of setting aside the importance and respect of those authors. They either saw what they saw and did what they did, or the book is merely a piece of literature.)

      You can't paint all Jews with one brush on these sorts of things, just like you can't with all Christians.

      Fair enough.

      I'd lump myself into the boat of "American cultural Jews"... But I don't believe in an omnipotent God, or believe that if there is such a God he is disjoint from our universe and unknowable to us,...

      I don't believe he is either disjoint from our universe or unknowable to us. I hope you will come to believe in his existence and power, but this doesn't seem to be the time to dwell on such things.

      ... and that good and bad behavior should be motivated by a working ethical framework, not religious fear.

      I dislike the terms good/bad, right/wrong in this context. They're way too ambiguous. I prefer legal/illegal, ethical/unethical, and moral/immoral. I think each distinction has its place. I do agree that ethics based on the golden rule should permeate our society.

      In any case, the question the Orthodox Jews are dealing with seems to be about when a person can be considered dead - I fail to see why their religious scholars don't admit the limits of their expertise and acknowledge that this is a question better determined by medical science and the families of the deceased than by themselves.

      The medical community is incapable of determining when the soul is gone. Indeed, they do not (as a profession) admit to the existence of a soul. The typical family member does not understand the intricacies of either medicine or theology. (Granted, it ultimately is their choice.) Therefore, in the absence of other experts, the spiritual adviser is expected to choose a position. It is either that or admit that nobody knows the answer to a very, very important question. The scenario is rational. The position seems rational, even if an irrational double standard is based on it.

      --
      I won't join Slashcott. OTOH, If Beta goes live, I just won't be back until it's fixed. Sorry Dice.
  52. Hey Mods! by gd2shoe · · Score: 1

    How in the world is the parent post a Troll?

    Think about it. If the Executive, Legislature, Judge, and Jury were all one person (God) is he going to give any leeway to loopholes?

    Obvious, maybe (to some), but not Troll.

    --
    I won't join Slashcott. OTOH, If Beta goes live, I just won't be back until it's fixed. Sorry Dice.
    1. Re:Hey Mods! by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      Beats me...

      Seems it's not possible to discuss Religion on a principle base. Not even discussion real or fake, or whose imaginary friend is better. Sure, we can discuss the superiority of Star Wars FTL drive over Star Trek's version, but the moment you try to discuss anything but contemporary fiction, you're troll.

      *shrug*

      I got Karma to burn, do your worst!

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    2. Re:Hey Mods! by Culture20 · · Score: 1

      Think about it. If the Executive, Legislature, Judge, and Jury were all one person (God) is he going to give any leeway to loopholes?

      Except He does... The whole concept of the sacrifice and scapegoat is one of a loophole: The price of XYZ sins is death, but the death can be a lamb's death. Christianity is completely founded upon the same loophole. Who cares if Christ rose from the grave if his death can't be used in place of one's own death to pay the price? It's the whole reason why Good Friday is called "Good".

    3. Re:Hey Mods! by gd2shoe · · Score: 1

      I disagree. It's not a loophole. It's God's amnesty program. He intends for us to take advantage of it, even commands us to, and that makes all the difference.

      --
      I won't join Slashcott. OTOH, If Beta goes live, I just won't be back until it's fixed. Sorry Dice.
  53. "In Israel.." by kauttapiste · · Score: 1

    What? Not a single "In Soviet Russia.." joke so far?
    No respect for traditions these days..

    In Soviet Russia, The Queue jumps potiental organ donors!

  54. Do you ever listen to yourself? by SmallFurryCreature · · Score: 1

    You are claiming that signing a donor card might make you more liable to die since the doctors would kill you for your organs. Your solution, give a monitory incentive for your killing as well.

    Smart.

    And this problem really ain't all that complex. If I refuse to pay taxes, can I claim social benefits? If I don't pay road taxes, can I drive on the public roads? If I don't have insurance, can I claim insurance?

    People without donor cards who want a donated organ are the ultimate "do as I say, don't do as I do". And no, they don't deserve to life.

    --

    MMO Quests are like orgasms:

    You may solo them, I prefer them in a group.

    1. Re:Do you ever listen to yourself? by khallow · · Score: 1

      You are claiming that signing a donor card might make you more liable to die since the doctors would kill you for your organs. Your solution, give a monitory incentive for your killing as well.

      The doctors already have the monetary incentive to kill you. They get paid whether or not the organ donor gets paid.

  55. Re:I'm a donor. Are you? by darthflo · · Score: 2, Insightful

    That's a lot of talk about overpopulation and world hunger. If you're really this concerned, why don't you grab a flight to "certain parts of Africa and Asia", slash your throat and donate the usable parts of your body to a "famil[y] of people near starving to death"? You'll not only provide food and directly reduce the population but might just cause one or a few cases of Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease, reducing the number of people living in such bad circumstances.

    Being a registered donor is a rather elegant way to put my mind at ease with the thought of dying. Should I die through some random act of stupidity, I'll still have done my best to allow someone else to live their life to the fullest. If I'm not going to use an organ anymore, why throw it away? Give it to somebody who needs it and allow them to enjoy a bit of extra time. They might be the one to find a solution to the pressing problems you describe above. And if they aren't, I'll afford them with the responsibility of recognizing that and donating their organs to somebody more deserving.

  56. So register / put it in your will by Animaether · · Score: 1

    When I die, my body does not belong to the State.

    So register that, if you have a donor registry such as NL - or put it in your will if there is no such registry / you have privacy concerns.

    Seems to me that the taboo on death is, in fact, at play here.

    If you are religious and believe in some form of a soul, then the body tends to be an empty vessel once you're dead.
    If you aren't religious, then you probably believe that the lack of any electrical signals pretty much means your body is just organic matter.

    By the way - your life is opt-out. Unless you made a conscious decision to be born into this world ;)

  57. Yum Yum by Guppy · · Score: 1

    Ham and Cheese on Matzo.

    Mmm.... Sacrelicious!

    1. Re:Yum Yum by dushkin · · Score: 1

      I actually had butter (not margarine) and salami in my sandwich once and nobody cared. I also had pork once but that's hard to detect.

      --
      o hai
  58. Copyright (C) -2.4E+06 by God by volpe · · Score: 2, Funny

    (Apparently receiving an organ is OK under religious law.)

    They're cracking down. As we all know, the problem is uploading, not downloading.

    1. Re:Copyright (C) -2.4E+06 by God by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Subject line is wrong - the religious crazies in question would obviously want it (C) -4004.

  59. Drop the strawman by Shivetya · · Score: 1

    Oh I am sure I too can come up with any contrived reason to prove my point.

    It comes down to one thing, people who don't step up to the plate are offended that those who do get some kind of benefit.

    It is a great example of what is wrong with society these days, everyone wants everything they just don't want to earn it.

    --
    * Winners compare their achievements to their goals, losers compare theirs to that of others.
    1. Re:Drop the strawman by Rakshasa+Taisab · · Score: 1

      And a strawman it was... The Israeli law (assuming it's the same as a few months ago) prioritizes registered organ donors when the patients are _EQUALLY_ suited from a medical perspective.

      So that chain-smoker would be at the back of the queue.

      --
      - These characters were randomly selected.
  60. Theology and custom ratified by it by John+Guilt · · Score: 1
    Cutting into a living body is permissible (some would say 'required') for the preservation of live. Cutting into a dead body _should_ be so, for the preservation of another's life, but here it comes into conflict with customs of leaving the dead as undisturbed as possible that probably pre-date (let's call it) 'theological Judaism'. That is to say, as a Jew who is respectful of his people's body of law (because it worked decently for a long time in the absence of direct physical power to enforce it, because though I don't believe in majuscule H majuscule N 'Human Nature' but think that some things about people don't change very much, making old observations of them interesting, and because it is an interesting formal system) but not religious, I see this part of the law as being a ratification of custom...by contrast, see all the ways we found not to enforce the customs demanding death, as in the declaration that no son was or ever will be disobedient enough to merit lapidary punishment.

    Ours isn't even the most extreme version of what is (in my arrogant opinion) far too much respect for the dead. See the Navajo concept of 'chindi', at least as presented/{possibly distorted} by Tony Hillerman. In general, and real anthropologists (as opposed to survival anthropologists from Mars) please correct this if I'm wrong, funerary customs seem to be especially persistent---perhaps because the uh 'item' at the middle of them can't object, and those closest to it are generally in no mood to do. Few Japanese are devout Buddhists or any kind of Christian, yet almost all funerals are Buddhist whilst weddings have changed to the movie-style 'Christian' sort.

    A similar religious obligation, that of not letting a corpse be alone, is kind of sweet, and is reminiscent of how elephants mourn.

    1. Re:Theology and custom ratified by it by gartogg · · Score: 1

      Read up a bit on the matter. If they are dead, it's actually not a problem at all. For suggested reading, we'll go with, um... the first article linked to here: http://science.slashdot.org/story/10/03/15/0042240/In-Israel-Potential-Organ-Donors-Could-Jump-the-Queue

      Oh wait, I guess I could just say RTFA.

      RTFA. Seriously.

      --
      I'm a concientious .sig objector.
  61. Re:I'm a donor. Are you? by goose-incarnated · · Score: 1

    Not being an organ donor does not make you a douche bag. People may have valid reasons for choosing not to be a donor. Some of those are religious or ethical,

    And those reasons are the ones that make you a douchebag.

    Would you want to accept an organ from a person that has not taken good care of that organ in their body?

    The organ you receive could actually kill you if your body outright rejects it without appropriate post operative medical care.

    In a choice between certain death via organ failure and possible death because someone didn't eat right and exercise often, I'll take the latter, thanks. Your argument is plain stupid.

    --
    I'm a minority race. Save your vitriol for white people.
  62. Well, it sure beats harvesting organs without... by Simulant · · Score: 2, Informative
  63. Breath, not heart-beat by John+Guilt · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Breath animated Adam; the word for the human-level spirit 'ruakh' (as opposed to the animal and divine spirits) is related to breath, air, or wind, like the Sanskrit 'atman', cognate to the Greek 'atmos'. Basically, you become an human being when you first draw breath. And it used to be a lot easier to tell when someone had stopped breathing than when their heart had stopped beating, especially in a body-taboo--rich, culture.

    1. Re:Breath, not heart-beat by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I am the atman, I am the atman, I am the WALRUS! Goo Goo Ka Choob!

    2. Re:Breath, not heart-beat by MadUndergrad · · Score: 1

      So fetuses aren't people? Quick, someone tell the Christians!

  64. Very good... by John+Guilt · · Score: 1
    ...especially as Islam really seems to me to be the universalised, more contagious, form of Judaism. (We neither want you to become a Jew if you aren't, nor believe that you will move into a cellar and burn* if you don't.) Not to say that there isn't a strong we're-best strain in it, but that's damned-near universal, and much less obnoxious than insisting that you join or deserve torture forever...though the latter is a much better marketing strategy..

    *Back when the National Lampoon was funny---that is, before it died, and before P.J. O'Rourke got his fratcentric hands all over it, there was a very good little piece purporting to be the diary of an adventurous Inca who journeyed to Spain in (say) 1450, in a giant urn well-stocked with guinea pigs. He said that the majority of the country were Christ-me, who believe that 'after they die will turn into birds'; the others, the Jew-men and Moor-men, will 'go into a cellar and burn'.

  65. Anonymous Coward. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    majority of orthodox jews have no issue with organ donation.. its a misleading statement. maybe 10% (or less) of the entire community. The issue comes when you are donating organs for testing and not for saving someones life. giving and receiving is 100% "kosher" by 99% of the people..

    get your facts right first please..

  66. Bone marrow? One of two kidneys? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Bone marrow? One of two kidneys? You don't have to be dead and they can save a life. Even if they don't DIRECTLY do so, the dialysis machine is expensive and the fewer people need it, the less money is spent on them and spent in other ways, saving lives.

  67. Bah, more charedi trouble by Godefricus · · Score: 1

    [Quote]
    (Apparently receiving an organ is OK under religious law.)
    [/Unquote]

    I lived in Israel for a while, and stopped trying to have empathy or to care for the ultra-orthodox when this happened:

    It's shabat.
    A woman from an ultra-orthodox ('charedi') family in a charedi neighbourhood in J'lem (Mea Shearim) is in labour, but things are difficult.
    Someone goes out to get an ambulance. The ambulance drives in the neighbourhood, and the same family that ordered for the ambulance to come, start throwing stones at the van because they are driving a car on shabat in their neighbourhood.

    There comes a point when the reasoning of a religious group becomes so messed up that you can't possibly try to take it into account anymore in a normal social relationship.

    So my immediate response when I read about the charedis making trouble again about something that does not fit in their belief system was:
    Whatever, I don't care. You don't want to give, you don't get, end of story.

  68. Organ donors and priority by galadriel · · Score: 1

    Here's a USA group trying to make that more fair:
    http://www.lifesharers.org/

    In only a few circumstances is it even a possibility to make an organ donation; death by most illness or simple old age won't leave the organs in a state where they can be harvested. So only a very small number of deaths make it possible to donate organs.

    No matter what you indicate with an organ donor card or on your driver's license, your family will in fact have the final say about whether or not organ donation happens. It's a good idea to discuss organ donation with whoever might be making the decision, so they do know what you wanted.

    And it does seem to be to be pretty unfair that someone who wouldn't be willing to donate an organ might be at the top of the queue for receiving an organ donation.

  69. Bombings? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Is anyone worried about bombings from these fringe groups?

    Religions are stupid. Even if you believe in some kind of a god, she/he/it gave humans the knowledge to use things in our environments for medical purposes. Things like pig heart valves.

    OTOH, I think that people who are part of the organ donor program SHOULD go to the front of the line over non-donors. I'm always confused that some people believe helping others once your body is dead isn't a good thing.

    Confused I tell you.

  70. How About Those Who Can't Donate? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    There are plenty of people out there in this country that would donate at the drop of a hat, if they could. There are certain genetic and/or blood disorders that rule out these donors from giving an organ to others, but they are able to accept organs just like anyone else without a hightened risk of rejection.

  71. Re:I'm a donor. Are you? by demonlapin · · Score: 1

    Jobs did what anyone can do - he registered on more than one transplant center's list. What makes him special is that he can afford to fly anywhere in the country on no notice so as to be ready to receive the organ. Anyone with a bit of time and $100k to charter a private jet can do the same.

  72. Not in Canada by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    IIRC the way this is generally handled in Canada is that the kids can be made temporary wards of the local Children's Aid Society for a week or so, while the treatment is administered. The courts generally prefer that alternative approaches be found that satisfy the religious beliefs involved, but if it is not possible, the medical staff have the authority to save a minor child's life regardless of the wishes of the parents - see link

  73. Put organ donation on the public eye by esaulgd · · Score: 1

    This controversy is already going to have a great benefit by making everyone (in Israel at least) think about organ donation and, hopefully, make a decision on whether to become a donor or not.
    As I understand, one of the major problems with organ supply is that even people who would be inclined to donate never actually register or discuss the topic with their families. By the time the question is relevant, they are no longer able to state their opinion, so the family has to agonize over the decision and tends to choose the "safe" option of not donating.

  74. Shoot more palestinians by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I hear they're full of organs, you fascist Semites! Oh, I forgot, you already do it... http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2009/dec/21/israeli-pathologists-harvested-organs

  75. AGAINST RELIGIOUS LAW by Philip+K+Dickhead · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Which is why they "harvest" them from murdered Palestinian children.

    "Doctor admits Israeli pathologists harvested organs without consent"
    http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2009/dec/21/israeli-pathologists-harvested-organs

    ""It was the middle of the night. The soldiers caused an electrical power outage in the entire village. Bilal was returned in a black bag; he had no teeth. The body was stitched from the neck all the way down to the abdomen," the Swedish newspaper quoted the mother as saying."

    "Swedish daily publishes second article on 'IDF organ harvesting' "
    http://www.ynetnews.com/articles/0,7340,L-3765992,00.html

    Only the devil dares not to speak the name of God - which invokes the grace of divine presence.

    --
    "Speaking the Truth in times of universal deceit is a revolutionary act." -- George Orwell
    1. Re:AGAINST RELIGIOUS LAW by Jiro · · Score: 1, Troll

      That's out of context. Palestinians specifically weren't targeted, and the perpetrators weren't acting on behalf of the Israeli government. It's like reading an article about a car accident killing some people and saying "Israel Runs Palestinian Children Over With Cars" on the grounds that the car was being driven in Israel and one of the people killed was a Palestinian child.

      Except that the headline follows years of false accusations of the same thing that aren't even based off of real traffic accidents, but were excuses to kill Jews.

      In other words, it's an anti-semitic lie, used to foment hate.

    2. Re:AGAINST RELIGIOUS LAW by Jiro · · Score: 1

      Oh, and the organs were taken from people who died of other causes. They weren't killed for the organs.

    3. Re:AGAINST RELIGIOUS LAW by Philip+K+Dickhead · · Score: 1, Flamebait

      Play the victims again - it works every time.

      --
      "Speaking the Truth in times of universal deceit is a revolutionary act." -- George Orwell
    4. Re:AGAINST RELIGIOUS LAW by Eli+Gottlieb · · Score: 1

      I'm dearly sorry that I don't have mod points and that the people who do apparently can't see the forest for the anti-Semitic trees.

    5. Re:AGAINST RELIGIOUS LAW by Toonol · · Score: 1

      Insanely, you are moderated troll, instead of the paranoid and overly-excitable GP.

    6. Re:AGAINST RELIGIOUS LAW by Jiro · · Score: 1

      Reposting because this is really serious misinformation that's being spread:

      That's out of context. Palestinians specifically weren't targeted, and the perpetrators weren't acting on behalf of the Israeli government. It's like reading an article about a car accident killing some people and saying "Israel Runs Palestinian Children Over With Cars" on the grounds that the car was being driven in Israel and one of the people killed was a Palestinian child.

      Except that the headline follows years of false accusations of the same thing that aren't even based off of real traffic accidents, but were excuses to kill Jews.

      In other words, it's an anti-semitic lie, used to foment hate.

    7. Re:AGAINST RELIGIOUS LAW by Philip+K+Dickhead · · Score: 2, Interesting

      What are the pernicious lies used to kill tens of thousands of Palestinians, reduce the rest to wretched sub-human conditions - in a policy of theft and subjugation on a scale that makes historical South African Apartheid look like paradise on earth?

      Is hating Israel a greater crime than Israeli murder of civilian Arabs? With illegal chemical weapons? Then robbing organs for transplant, because donating them violates the Satanic religious laws of the orthodox?

      If people hate Israel, it is because that hate sates that represent the tyrant, the murderer, the bigot and the pirate.

      --
      "Speaking the Truth in times of universal deceit is a revolutionary act." -- George Orwell
    8. Re:AGAINST RELIGIOUS LAW by Philip+K+Dickhead · · Score: 1

      Wow! Now 50% LESS immoral! As long as they were Goyim, I guess it doesn't much matter?

      --
      "Speaking the Truth in times of universal deceit is a revolutionary act." -- George Orwell
    9. Re:AGAINST RELIGIOUS LAW by Philip+K+Dickhead · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I Get It.

      Bashing Islam is Freedom of Speech - Criticizing Israel is a Hate Crime.

      --
      "Speaking the Truth in times of universal deceit is a revolutionary act." -- George Orwell
    10. Re:AGAINST RELIGIOUS LAW by Eli+Gottlieb · · Score: 1

      When you claim that Israel engaged in a policy of robbing Arabs of their organs based on the Swiss article, that goes beyond criticism because it leaves the realm of fact. It enters the area of conspiracy theory and anti-Semitic blood-libel tropes.

      One team at one hospital took corneas from any cadaver who came in. This was found out and revealed to the public more than 10 years before the Aftonbladet article. It was also stopped. The Aftonbladet article is a shoddy piece of National Enquirer-level journalism that only receives any serious treatment by people under the heavy influence of anti-Semitic memes.

      Just admit that you've got no factual basis for your so-called criticism and move on to hating something real,like the occupation of the West Bank.

    11. Re:AGAINST RELIGIOUS LAW by Philip+K+Dickhead · · Score: 1

      You can't tell Switzerland from Sweden.

      The story, as cited, is the disinformation spin - once the story came out, Israeli sources admit to a fraction of the problem. Then they claim exageration and throw the "victim" monkey-wrench, again.

      "We used to steal organs and lie about it, but now we stopped stealing and lying - Trust me!"

      Israel claims to be a victim of Palestinian violence. That is such a tragic inversion of the truth on every level. Like the fucking Americans, making movies that depict themselves as victims of Apache violence.

      Israel is not a victim. It is a killer of babies and starver of mothers.

      There is one God, and Israel murders God's children.

      --
      "Speaking the Truth in times of universal deceit is a revolutionary act." -- George Orwell
  76. Re:Question: by History's+Coming+To · · Score: 1

    Simple, you go with the Hypocratic oath that all doctors take: "First Do No Harm" sums it up. You do not allow the first child to die unless there's nothing else to be done, regardless of whether or not they're a donor. THEN you think about organ donation. Medical ethics have covered this topic ad nauseum.

    --
    Please consider this account deleted, I just can't be bothered with the spam anymore.
  77. Those in need of organs. by GargamelSpaceman · · Score: 1

    Those in need of organs are not all dead, they are only mostly dead. The medical miracle worker might enquire: 'What is it that you've got that's worth living for?'

    In most cases, the answer is 'to blathe'. Really it's usually best to just go through their pockets and look for loose change.

    --
    ...
  78. Re:I'm a donor. Are you? by misexistentialist · · Score: 1

    You could save a few lives by donating more of your income. Most of use don't bother because we know that lives aren't worth it. Donating organs is probably counter-productive in many cases since it diverts health-care money from people with minor issues to those who will live in suffering for only a short time even if they get the transplant.

  79. Israel admits it steals Palestinian organs by bigsexyjoe · · Score: 1, Informative
    The government admits they illegally takes the organs of Palestinians without permission. Many of these Palestinians where killed by the Israeli military, of course. They started by taking corneas and gluing the eyes shut to hide their actions.

    I'm not sure why they honor the decisions of the ultra-orthodox, but not Palestinians. (That was a rhetorical statement of course. I understand why.)

    Here is a link.

    1. Re:Israel admits it steals Palestinian organs by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      Wow, your link is to Al Jazeera, that well known news source that never spreads rumors. Except when it does. Could you at least try to find a source that isn't biased against Israel (or Palestine, for that matter)?

      --
      Qxe4
    2. Re:Israel admits it steals Palestinian organs by bstender · · Score: 1

      here ya go: http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/middle_east/8245306.stm
      start there and work back to the original article igniting the recent flap and then to previous complaints going back years. there's a lot to answer for.

      --
      look sig is kool
    3. Re:Israel admits it steals Palestinian organs by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      To be honest, if that is really going on, it is terrible, but this article provides no evidence. It is merely accusations, which are interesting, but without evidence it is meaningless. You might as well speculate that Jews are part of a conspiracy to take over the world. Accusations without evidence don't carry much weight.

      --
      Qxe4
    4. Re:Israel admits it steals Palestinian organs by bstender · · Score: 1

      True, though Israel could easily put the lie to such scandalous charges, it is also reasonable for them to dismiss something like this when no proof is presented. But there are also a number of organ theft cases, summarized here: http://www.ifamericansknew.org/cur_sit/sweden.html/ Read a few of them and see if you're still sure there's no fire behind that smoke. Stories that are way more specific and solid, with means and motive than suggest it's all a vast conspiracy theory cum anti-semitic blood libel. (and yet also true, after 60 years of manifest ethnic cleansing, brutality and wholesale Palestinian organ obliteration it is dangerously easy to jump to false conclusions)

      --
      look sig is kool
    5. Re:Israel admits it steals Palestinian organs by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      That website is still very dubious. Some of the footnote links are pretty dubious as well. It also ends with a story about sacrifices in the middle ages. It is true there is some evidence of sacrifices by Jews in the middle ages, but I don't really care about that since everyone was doing bad stuff in the middle ages.

      Furthermore, if the Jewish government is doing this, what is the point of returning the bodies? If it were true they could easily cover the whole thing up and incinerate (or bury) the bodies.

      --
      Qxe4
  80. Re:I'm a donor. Are you? by TheMiddleRoad · · Score: 1

    If enough people are willing to donate, then the waits won't be as long for everyone, eliminating the unfairness.

  81. It's not about death, it's about afterlife by gwolf · · Score: 1

    Jews believe the Messiah will come and will raise the dead from their graves. If my liver outlived me for 20 years in somebody else's body, the Messiah will have a hard time resurrecting me.

    Jewish law forbids organ donation, as well as it forbids cremating the dead, as the body as a whole is holy and will get its life back in the aftermath of times.

    Of course, we all know organs decompose and get eaten by worms and whatnot... But that is the justification, after all. Do not argue about logic with religious people!

    1. Re:It's not about death, it's about afterlife by ars · · Score: 1

      What about arguing logic with ignorant people?

      Because you are wrong, Jews do not believe that. Organ donation has nothing to do with resurrection whatsoever. There is a prohibition of mutilating a corpse, but saving a life trumps that.

      The problem is the definition of death and organ donation while the donor heart still beats is considered murder.

      --
      -Ariel
    2. Re:It's not about death, it's about afterlife by multi+io · · Score: 1

      There is a prohibition of mutilating a corpse, but saving a life trumps that.

      So, corneal or kidney transplants from a corpse would still be prohibited because the receiver's life doesn't depend on it? That still doesn't sound very logical to me.

  82. I already opted out. by Medievalist · · Score: 1

    My estate will be taking care of my body in a way that I, and my heirs, feel is appropriate. No embalming or burning or transplants for me, thank you. That shit's for the short-sighted. I hope to eventually become part of a mighty oaken timber holding up a beautiful piece of sustainable architecture, but honestly I will settle for just not becoming a bunch of spoiled meat soaked with refinery toxins. Maintaining productive soil is more valuable to the human race than temporarily extending the life of any one person.

    Now, if some living person asks me nicely on my deathbed if they can have one of my organs, I might consider it. If I really, really like that person, if I really think their existence makes the world a fundamentally better place, then maybe. But I'd rather not end up like William Lucas, thanks anyway, so don't put me on any lists.

  83. Re: Far right Jews and jobs by ThousandStars · · Score: 1
    far right Jews is that most of the guys are in some form of learning program, so the women are often the primary breadwinners. This leads to the average Jewish woman on the far right having more education and job training than her husband.

    This is somewhat true; the term for ultra Orthodox Jewish men is "sit and learn," and chiefly the Talmud. Rebecca Goldstein's novel The Mind-Body Problem discusses this phenomenon extensively.

    It's not quite true to say that the average woman has more education, since most of their businesses are of the small, shop-keeper / mender / teacher types (and teacher doesn't mean "M.A. and in public schools." It means "high school education then teaching at the Yeshiva"); it would be more accurate to say that many women in that culture have a larger direct financial impact on the world.

  84. The original organ donor by 200_success · · Score: 1

    Wasn't Adam the original organ donor? Eve was created from his rib.

  85. Every country should do this by thetoadwarrior · · Score: 1

    Sorry but if you're not willing to share your organs then you shouldn't get any other person's organs. The UK has a situation where they're low on organs because of course everyone is happy to take them but doesn't want to share.

    I think making donors have priority is the most fair solution. You can't have organ donation without donors so we need to do something to encourage people to share. They won't need them when they're dead.

  86. OT-GPL by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

    How about an Organ Transplant General Public License?

    "I hereby agree to donate my organs, in the event of my death, to anyone in need of them, but only so long as they agree to do the same upon the receipt of my organs, for as long as those organs are within them."

  87. Circumcision's roots by TheMiddleRoad · · Score: 1

    I believe the circumcision practice comes from ancient health reasons. Cleanliness was not godliness back in the days, and an dirty foreskin led to infection. In response, there were practices of circumcision, something that Judaism adopted along with kosher laws for similar reasons.

    Now, thousands of years later, it's tradition, a link to the history of my people. Tradition is important. So yes, we had our son circumcised. Is it child abuse? He cried, fell asleep, and then woke up happy. Now he definitely likes his penis, a lot.

    Are earrings child abuse? How about the lip and ear stretching and other body modifications done in various cultures? Traditional Mori tattooing of kids? Context is everything. These are loving acts.

    In contrast, female circumcision, done to reduce female sexuality, is child abuse because of its context.

    1. Re:Circumcision's roots by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      So according to you, if you cut your infant daughter's parts - out of love (you want to protect her from evil sex until she marries - and she learns to live like that, maybe even "definitely liking her new parts" never knowing how it would have worked otherwise, it is then ok ?

  88. Re:I'm a donor. Are you? by Myopic · · Score: 1

    Would you want to accept an organ from a person that has a communicable disease and that disease would come to you from a donated organ?

    Jeez, I keep seeing people make this totally vacuous argument.

    Do you realize that the medical establishment takes extreme caution to weed out low-quality organs? I mean, you obviously do not realize that, so go ahead and consider yourself educated. If you are a smoker, your lungs aren't going to be donated. If you are a drinker, your liver is going to fail the test. But in both cases, your eyes might be of use, or something else.

  89. When you need an organ transplant, by Nicolas+MONNET · · Score: 1

    ... you will get none.

    But you can be sure nobody will pry your rotten entrails from your cold dead hands!

  90. Re:I'm a donor. Are you? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Nice straw man fuckwad

    You outright proved his point, people like you who are dumb enough to think you're somehow doing good are part the problem-

    "a rather elegant way to put my mind at ease"

    That's nice, I'm glad you've convinced yourself that you're not part the problem and you can die happily now. Sorry to break it to you, you can't, you're still part the problem.

    World hunger seemed to be a minor point about the GP's post, why did you focus entirely on that? Nothing to say about the rest of it? Or know deep down that he's right, but don't want to risk not putting your mind at ease?

    Why would he kill himself when it'd mean there'd be a bigger proportion of ignorant cockfaces like yourself polluting the gene pool compared to people who are actually able to see the bigger picture and not pretend that they're being altruistic when they're actually just trying to make themselves feel better about them being exactly what's wrong with the human race?

    You can't possible assume that you'll be saving someone good, who will find the solution to the world's problems, statistically you're far more likely to be saving a murderer, rapist, or paedophile than one of those once in a century geniuses capable of really contributing enough to help solve such difficult problems. Most likely of all though, you'll just save someone like yourself who consumes far, far more than his fair share of what the earth can provide, hence all you'll actually do is perpetuate that problem that is yourself.

    The real question you should be asking yourself, is if you're not going to use an organ anymore, then why not throw it away so that it can at least contribute matter back to the Earth that can be reused.

  91. how can you be so sure, you never tried by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The "erogenous zone" you're referring to is not necessary, is not missed, and let me assure you, everything works perfectly well without it. There is no missing sensation because it was removed.

    Oh great pontificator, how can you be so sure, given it's something you never actually got a chance to try ? Why don't we find somebody who did ?

    http://www.cirp.org/library/complications/money/

    1. Re:how can you be so sure, you never tried by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Are you kidding? Did you even read the article? Here, let me summarize, if you can stand to read all the way through my post:

      1. It's from 1983. That alone means nothing, but it's barely been cited by any other research in almost 30 years since. This paper has clearly been firmly embraced by the medical community.

      2. Sample size of: 5! I'm sure we're going to find some statistically significant results here!

      3. One of the five had -increased- sensitivity after his circumcision! Maybe we should tell everyone to get a circumcision because this paper proves that it will make sex better!

      4. THEY ALL HAD UNDERLYING PENILE MEDICAL CONDITIONS. How could you possibly gloss over that? Do you think maybe the fact that their penises were inflamed and/or infected might hint at some underlying condition? How do you know they weren't losing sensation because of the inflammation/infection? How do you know the circumcisions didn't aggravate these conditions -- meaning they shouldn't have been performed in the first place?

      5. The whole introduction reeks of the authors having an agenda before they even start pretending to talk about science and medicine. Here's a tip: when a paper seeks to say SUBJECT A is bad because of SCIENTIFIC REASON B, but devotes several paragraphs to IRRELEVANT PSEUDO-HISTORICAL REASON C to prepare the reader to be firmly opposed to SUBJECT A before hearing any of the actual evidence, you're probably reading a steaming pile of shit.

      6. One of the circumcisions was botched. Everybody knows it's a medical procedure, and medical procedures can have complications. You can debate whether the risk is appropriate, but you can't characterize the entirety of circumcisions that go without a single problem based on the rare instances where something goes wrong.

      7. There's quite a differences between performing an operation on someone when he is a week old, versus when he is a grown man, wouldn't you say? So are you arguing about whether grown men should be allowed to choose a circumcision because you think it's too risky for them? Or are you implying that the issue of circumcision is exactly the same for babies and grown men?

      So in conclusion this article says nothing about circumcision in general, in normal cases, the differences between psychological issues with babies (I would argue that they have none because they don't remember!) versus grown men, nor does it use any quantifiable scientific method other than asking a couple of guys with gross penises how they feel after they have their foreskins sheared off improperly. Let's give Money and Davison a Nobel!

      "Pontificator," really? I think you should take a step back, and examine your agenda before you continue. Who are you mad at? Doctors? Parents? Jews? I mean calling me names and then digging up a summary of some of the worst research I have ever heard of that you found on Google Scholar (hm, result #4, go figure!) suggests to me that you're taking this way too personally for a reason that probably doesn't have to do with your own foreskin.

  92. people love communism too by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And people love communism too because they were born and grew up in it and know no other way.

    If it was done when you were a baby then you had no opportunity to find out how it would have been pre-op.

    1. Re:people love communism too by Myopic · · Score: 1

      Indeed, I have only my imagination; likewise the uncircumcised. Alas, imagination is a human's only basis for empathy, each of us stuck forever in only a single mind.

  93. Re: Far right Jews and jobs by story645 · · Score: 1

    It means "high school education then teaching at the Yeshiva")

    So lots of my friends are kollel wives and still more want to be, so I have a pretty good idea of how the culture wants. I'm the odd girl out for not wanting it. Almost all of them have masters degrees (linguistics, special ed, speech therapy, etc.) and even the ones that teach at a yeshiva have real college degrees. At least in New York, even the ultra-orthodox girls take some form of post-secondary education.

    --
    open source modern art: laser taggi