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August 4, 2025 5 mins
The New York Times Wants Your Organs

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Speaker 1 (00:03):
New York Times has been having a wild one this week.
Check out the replies to this one. All right, so
New York Times, The New York Times guest, essay, it's
an opinion piece. Donor organs are too rare. We need
a new definition of death. I believe that's called being Canadian.

(00:24):
It seems like The New York Times is getting further
and further out and left field the more that time passes.
We recently told you about these shady practices the government
discovered around organ donation. HHS investigation finds systemic disregard for
sanctity of life in organ transplant system, with hospitals pushing
to kill donors who might recover. I guess there's a

(00:50):
note here. I guess I have to hand it to
my conspiracy theorist friends again. So we know that China
is a thriving stolen organs like they just take people's
organs out. They don't even ask prisoners, They'll just take
their organs. They've been a thriving organ transplant business going
on market going on in China. And I guess, I

(01:14):
guess hospitals here, doctors here got jealous because there's a
lot of money in that right. The way things stand,
doctors are pushing to call people dead before they're really
dead in order to take their organs. Well, I'm using mine,
so they can't have them. Right on, que The New
York Times is here to tell us that harvesting organs

(01:35):
from lifting patients is good. Actually, in fact, we're not
going far enough. Donor organs are too rare. We need
a new definition of death, do we know? Do we
can we just not take organs out of living people
and then not have to have a new definition of death,
right Like, I'd rather not have the new definition of

(01:57):
death and keep my organs, thank you. Guest se S,
doctor Sendi Jahar, Snaehl Patel, and Dean Smith, all from
Northwell in New York, think that we should redefine death
so that they can cut those money making life saving

(02:18):
organs out of your chest. So I don't know. I
went to their website, Northwll Health. I mean, it looks
all pretty legit. Here, looks pretty nice. I think they
want to help you. Let's see it says it says
our areas of care and this all looks you know,
perfectly nice. I mean cancer Institute kind of called you pediatrics,

(02:41):
but I noticed they're missing one. It seems that they
need one more window here and it says, uh, stealing
your organs, so along you know, cardiovascular Institute and then
stealing your organs. They're sing that one here, so I
don't know, maybe they're maybe they're still working on the site.

(03:05):
We need to figure out, like now, this is from
this is from the op ed. We need to figure
out how to obtain more healthy organs from donors while
maintaining strict ethical standards. New technologies can help, what like
suicide booths, but the best solution we believe is legal.
We need to broaden the definition of death. Everything is

(03:28):
just the definition of everything seems to be getting broadened
in ways that are alarming and like anti human. We
need to figure out how to like who was sitting
around thinking about this man? We really need to figure
out how to get more healthy organs from donors while
redefining the definition of death. I know what we'll do.

(03:49):
We'll pretend people who aren't dead are dead, so then
we can take their organs. Say problem solved anyway. I
guess the point is that they want your organs, right,
so they're going to redefine the definition of death. And
then one afternoon, a Sunday afternoon, you take a nap,
and you wake up and the doctor's standing there holding

(04:10):
your kidney, saying, I thought you were dead. I mean,
by this new definition, you were lying down. That counts
as dead. Now, No, you can't have a commission on
your kidney. Too bad, you shouldn't have taken a nap orin.
McIntyre says, the technocratic managers will slowly but steadily inact
every dystopian measure imaginable in order to squeeze every last

(04:34):
bit of efficiency out of the system. Their power must
be broken. Let's see what happened here? Perhaps New York
Times opinion editors should remember the paper's own article from
a few weeks ago. So what happened here? In New Mexico,
a woman was subjected to days of preparation for donation,
even after her family said that she seemed to be

(04:55):
regaining consciousness, which she eventually did. Did she have all
our organs? When she did? In Florida, a man cried
and bit on his breathing tube, but was still withdrawn
from life support. In West Virginia, doctors were appalled when
coordinators asked a paralyzed man coming off sedatives in an

(05:15):
operating room for consent to remove his organ Like, what
is going on? I'm sure all this is coming to Canadas.
They're probably already doing it, right, somebody said, like a
teenager went to the doctor, said they were depressed. Immediately
the doctor put them on the maid list and took
out their organs. The world is becoming a horrifying place anyway.

(05:37):
That's all I'm going to say about that. Please like,
share and subscribe. Subscribing really helps me out. I thank
you for that. I will see you next time.
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