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- Newsgroups: dc.general
- Path: sparky!uunet!digex.com!dougnews
- From: dougnews@access.digex.com (Doug Humphrey)
- Subject: Re: Protest
- Message-ID: <Bxzst3.n4n@access.digex.com>
- Sender: usenet@access.digex.com
- Nntp-Posting-Host: access.digex.com
- Organization: Express Access Online Communications, Greenbelt, MD USA
- References: <1992Nov17.042407.27816@hfsi.uucp> <BxwBMH.5J6@access.digex.com> <1992Nov19.042759.7655@hfsi.uucp>
- Date: Fri, 20 Nov 1992 02:12:37 GMT
- Lines: 66
-
- In article <foo.042759.7655@hfsi.uucp> ata@hfsi.uucp (John Ata - FSO) writes:
- >
- >I think that there are two issues here that are being confused.
- >The first is placing a monetary value on life so that one may make
- >a decision on whether to *actively* kill that person. That is, if
- >a certain monetary value is not met, then the person is executed
- >or killed. The other is placing a monetary value on expenditures
- >necessary to *prevent* a human death. This is placing a monetary
- >value in the passive sense. I maintain that the two situations
- >are different and should not be mixed. Although we quite
- >frquently do the latter, I don't believe that we have ever had a
- >policy of doing the former. Perhaps you have an example of the
- >former being done?
-
- I am not sure that it can be quite that cut and dried; I don't
- think that there is anyone keeping track of some "economic worth"
- on people and killing them if they run a negative balance (makes
- me wonder how much overdraft protection costs!).
-
- Still, if it will help with the analysis, I will note that MUCH
- more money and effort will be spent on *saving* one person who is
- in a bad situation than will be spent for preventative measures.
- The calculations seem a lot colder I presume when they are numbers
- on the paper, rather than a small child who has falled down a
- pipe shaft.
-
- As a counter to that, it is obvious that unlimited resources will
- *not* be made available in such a case. The hostages in Lebanon
- being an example where a chance *could* have been taken, money and
- lives and situation put at risk in an attempt to recover, with some
- chance of loss, but it was not done. It was considered, but judged
- too costly.
-
- Coal miners trapped after explosions, even when it is know they are
- alive, are sometimes abandoned because of the level of expense it
- would take to get them out. These are hard and ugly facts, and
- they are generally couched in discussions about additional lives
- that might be lost in a rescue attempts, but a billion or two
- dollars would have a good chance to build a special system to help
- these situations; someone decides not to spend that money.
-
- To some degree or another, the financial angle always ends up
- in here.
-
- >But it could be the end result of people's lives are reduced to merely
- >money.
-
- I can't ever see it happening where peoples lives are reduced to
- mearly money (there might be special cases to this though; I am not
- comfortable with the absolute statement). However, issues like
- how much money to spend on research on which desease come pretty
- close to this. Example and fun quiz for our home listeners follows!
-
- Given heart desease, cancer and AIDS, and given that the government
- says "here is a lump sum, this is all that we have to put toward
- this type of research" how do you decide how much goes to each?
-
- Remember the details that we have outlines above and in previous
- messages, apply them, and then see if you come out with what is
- really happening...
-
- --
- Doug Humphrey Express Access Public Access Internet Voice (301) 220-2020
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- "I say it again, in the land of the free; use your freedom of choice." -DEVO
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