Immortality for humans here means dramatic improvements in lifespan to the extent of 10x or longer lives (measured in quality years) compared to today's standards.
"If immortality for humans (10x the current lifespan, or more) was POSSIBLE, would you want it accessible to EVERYONE?"
It could be a procedure, an operation, a drug, a set of procedures, whatever, all of them clubbed into a large enough set of procedures that enable such a lifespan of quality years.
It doesn't just have to be available to everyone but also accessible for the purposes of this question.
This is a follow-up to the following poll:
@josh as in deprive them of a suite of life extension technologies at a trivial cost? Cancer, Alzheimer's, telomere shortening etc kill, but so does competition for resources. I will kill you with a hammer to take your lunch if I can't eat.
@ArmandodiMatteo if someone wants but can't get, that's available but not accessible. If it's accessible, that means the average person can get it if they want
@firstuserhere "the average person" or "everyone"? If someone in rural Somalia wants it and can't pay for it out of pocket and neither can the Somalian government, who should pay exactly?
@firstuserhere (also, I noticed the question says "would you want it" not "should it be made" β I guess the former means I'm allowed to disregard cost issues and just think about whether it would be desirable at all, right?)
@SemioticRivalry Say the magic cure is invented some day. Would you want to distribute it to everyone? Everyone? Or would you have a filter for who is eligible?
@firstuserhere like "hey we've invented antibiotics but we've decided to not give them to people who are left handed" ?
@firstuserhere any artificial filter for healthcare is essentially a violation of the declaration of Geneva.
"I WILL NOT PERMIT considerations of age, disease or disability, creed, ethnic origin, gender, nationality, political affiliation, race, sexual orientation, social standing or any other factor to intervene between my duty and my patient;"
https://www.wma.net/policies-post/wma-declaration-of-geneva/
@firstuserhere yes, but strongly in demand healthcare solutions tend to go down in cost over time, unless there is some form of market manipulation or corruption taking place
@firstuserhere in that situation all it would take would be for at least one other country to not artificially restrict this hypothetical therapy and you'd get a mass exodus of people