I know this wont go over well but I think it's important to remember: Steve Jobs did not treat his pancreatic cancer when he was first diagnosed and it was treatable, he instead sought holistic/alternative medicine treatments[1]. He leveraged his vast wealth to get a replacement liver [2] that at the time was known to only extend his life. That liver could have gone to someone that did not have such a negative prognosis and possibly saved their life for a lot longer than it did Steve. He used a chunk of his remaining time to work on his last yacht.He was a great product person but I don't think that excuses all of the horrible things he did as a human.
[1] https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/blog/food-for-thought/201...
[2] https://www.cnn.com/2009/HEALTH/06/24/liver.transplant.prior...
mmcallister|4 months ago
That's his choice, it's _his_ cancer after all
> I don't think that excuses all of the horrible things he did as a human
I think this is a bit of a leap. He's done some bad things sure, but the only ones you mentioned were...working on a yacht, using alternative medicine and getting a liver transplant
bdcravens|4 months ago
While you're right, freedom of choice implies acceptance of risk and consequence. Leveraging wealth to jump the line, and presumably taking a liver from someone who could have used it, seems like the opposite of that.
A similar example from recent years is those who rejected all medical advise regarding COVID, and were still entitled to a hospital bed and respirator when it didn't work out for them.
thefz|4 months ago
Stripped away some other people's choice, though.
cogman10|4 months ago
Jobs delayed for 9 months before doing traditional treatments. I don't believe he ever did full chemo.
Jobs getting the liver was more an exposure of a weakness of the transplant system in general. [1] Transplants are region locked. We can't easily move a liver across the country which means that it can be use it or lose it. Jobs had the resources to get put on lists across the country and had the resources to get to any part of the country from where ever he was in under 3 hours thanks to his private jet.
I don't think there's really a practical way to solve this problem. The want is national list for people that need new livers and some sort of life flight system to get the liver to the person in need.
I guess the one way to make it more fair would be coordinating the lists and tracking/penalizing someone for being registered across the nation. But if the list has Jobs on it the next person in line is also someone with cancer I don't really see a reason why Jobs couldn't get the liver.
[1] https://www.cnn.com/2009/HEALTH/06/24/liver.transplant.prior...
runamok|4 months ago
orionsbelt|4 months ago
cogman10|4 months ago
FollowingTheDao|4 months ago
It is because of what Jobs did we know what not to do.
IAmGraydon|4 months ago
vunderba|4 months ago
[1] https://finance.yahoo.com/news/steve-jobs-denied-daughter-ye...
bigyabai|4 months ago
devteq|4 months ago