Excellent post !
Purrrrr.....
Excellent post !
I have carried a doner card since I was 17... over 30 years.
However, if this proposal comes to fruition, I will seriously think about opting out.
The problem is that there are two opposed moral issues at stake.
1) I should help other people by donating what is of no further use to me.
2) I should resist totalinarianism and the dehumanisation of people.
Some of you may think that moral issue #2 is a bit over the top, but I think it is the more imoportant of the two.
What is the point of living if you don't even have rights over your own body?
In short, I regard the continued use of the word "donate" in the context of "presumed consent" to be a falsehood.
Taking parts of someones body without explicit consent is nothing short of theft.
It is the thin end of the wedge, and will lead to many abuses of this power, and others in future.
Once again, this seems a poorly considered idea being advanced as a benefit to all without consideration of the human price.
. Just stay with an opt in system and all such moral minefields are naturally avoided.
........and people die needlessly.
Concentrating on getting those people signed up would seem the obvious answer.
I agree, but sadly we live in a society where issues of this nature are a very low priority for the majority of the population, and therefore even if they were educated/informed then the poor take up would still result in demand for organs outstripping supply.
I am an organ donor, and also a blood donor, and the UK blood service are begging people to give blood but to little response. It pisses me off royally the can't be arsed attitude of the vast majority of the population who make no effort whatsoever to give up an hour twice a year to help others live.
I feel quiet strongly about this, that basic human rights ( simplified term I know ) should never be comprised because the majority of people just can't be arsed to register.
Just out of interest, does anyone know whether one's ability to donate blood while alive (which, for varying reasons, I am not and never will be permitted to do) has any bearing on whether organs can be used after death?
Just out of interest, does anyone know whether one's ability to donate blood while alive (which, for varying reasons, I am not and never will be permitted to do) has any bearing on whether organs can be used after death?
It comes down to a choice between morals and saving lives, you're entitled to your views, and come down on the your personal moral side of the fence, I just don't like the idea of people dieing, which drives my viewpoint.
In the UK gay men can donate organs, in Canada they can't.
I value freedoms more than I value life.
Each view is a valid position held by an individual.
Surely one solution would be for people to put the information on their driving licence/passport application. Although it will take time, given that most people in the UK have passports, which by definition have to be renewed every ten years, then the data will (eventually) cover a greater proportion of the population than at present.
In the UK gay men can donate organs, in Canada they can't.