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Old 03-23-2007, 02:05 AM
AWoodside AWoodside is offline
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Join Date: Aug 2006
Posts: 415
Default Re: Distribution > Human Life?

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There is just such a widespread illicit market in automobiles: Mercedes, to be exact. But, again, the comparison is inexact.

A stolen organ is not a knockoff etc. of a legitimate item. Once the illegitimately obtained organ is introduced into the supply chain, it is indistinguishable.

It would be like two types of wheat differentiable only on the basis of their sources. That's a distinction without a difference. Dealing in unlawfully obtained organs could become a more profitable business model than that of lawful organs, depending on the means used for acquiring each and the easy with which the bad guys can slip their organs into the legitimate marketplace.

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This is a good point. If only organs had some sort of "tag" on them we could rely on the market to resolve this issue. It would be great if there was something inherently unique about each living organism, that somehow we were able to test for, because then it would be almost trivial to come up with testing and indexing procedures that would make it obvious if a given organ were illegitimate. Oh well, I guess we don't live in a perfect world.
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