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- Newsgroups: talk.bizarre
- Path: sparky!uunet!usc!howland.reston.ans.net!spool.mu.edu!umn.edu!csus.edu!netcom.com!ead
- From: Eric De Mund <ead@netcom.com>
- Subject: editorial: man dying from hepatitis b is given a baboon's liver
- Message-ID: <1993Jan12.041619.16683@netcom.com>
- X-Reply-To: Eric De Mund <ead@netcom.com>
- Sender: ead@netcom.com (Eric De Mund)
- Reply-To: Eric De Mund <ead@netcom.com>
- Organization: Netcom Online Communication Services
- Date: Tue, 12 Jan 1993 04:16:19 GMT
- Lines: 29
-
- today's ny times has an article on the world's second recipient of a
- baboon liver (the man is dying of hepatitis b). his chronic hepatitus b
- infection would most likely infect a donated human liver, but baboon
- livers are believed to be resistant to hepatitis b.
-
- this raises several questions. first, this transplanting of individual
- organs strikes me as a very conservative approach to medicine. it would
- seem advantageous to investigate the transplanting of _entire_ baboons
- into humans, as there are undoubtedly benefits to be derived from other
- baboon organs. why not start with the entire baboon and gradually
- eliminate the organs that are found to lack benefit? [followups
- concerning the rumors that this is already the practice within the halls
- of congress to alt.politics.] second, does such an organ recipient
- continue to enjoy all the rights and privileges of citizenship? how high
- a percentage baboon can a person be and still hold public office? can a
- person with even one organ from a baboon that was born outside of the
- united states become president? finally, how is a person's baboon
- percentage measured? by weight? by volume? do objective measures even
- exist, or can only subjective tests, such as a modified turing test, be
- applied?
-
- every day that we fail to consider these and similar questions, the law
- falls further behind science and technology. however difficult, we must
- begin applying ourselves to the solution of these legal and moral issues
- _now_. the day that we can only choose from among baboons to occupy the
- highest office of the land is much too late.
-
- eric de mund <ead@netcom.com>
-
-