cthia wrote:Cauldron of GhostsShe raised her head again, just enough to give her two companions a ferocious glare. “What I do give a damn about is that I don’t want that chiseling scumbag landlord pocketing the money—which is what he did with Farouz’s remains. So when I die, keep it a secret from the shithead. Cut me up yourselves—the bathtub’s one of the few things in this dump that works—and freeze the parts. Then sell what you can.”
Anyone else think Weber is a genius in being able to see the ramifications of certain breakthroughs in medical science?
Although this passage is rather grotesque, I'm sure it is a reality. How many people may be murdered just to sell their parts. It reminds me of people burglarizing more and more visible sights to obtain copper - schools, businesses, etc. The copper epidemic - a new form of gold rush? It seems nothing is sacred. Apply that same mentality in the future and body parts have become the new copper. Damn. Humanity can be quite disgusting. I've heard of a high school football game being canceled because when they went to turn on the lights on the field they realized they had no power. Yards of copper wiring had been stolen.
It has gone from the stealing of cars for parts - to businesses and infrastructure for copper. And in the Honorverse, the human body has become the new source of bathroom chop-shops. Unbelievable.
Once upon a time, I used to be embarrassed that my parents drove their spaceship here to Earth and when we landed to fix a flat, I wandered off into the nearby woods and was inadvertently left (I think inadvertently) but I'm no longer embarrassed of not being human. You carbon based life forms are disgusting.
http://www.cnbc.com/id/
It's not exactly a new concept. If you've ever read any of Larry Niven's stories set in the time of where he has the UN as a true world government, one of the things they administer is the "Organ Banks". I don't remember the title of the short story (it's in some anthology); but the plot is basically a lawyer trying to save his client from dismemberment and his "pieces" being sent to the organ banks over 3 traffic tickets

I may favor capital punishment for some crimes, but that's a bit much even for me.

Interestingly enough, about 45 years ago when I was a teenager in high school, in many of the more remote rural areas phone lines were run *individually* on poles with those glass insulators one now only tends to see in antique shops. One morning heading in to school on the bus, we noticed that a 2 MILE section of copper phone wire had been removed from the poles.
So the "copper gold rush" isn't a new phenomenon either.