Kidney doctors for an iPhone meme, condemned by commentators



A Facebook post from Laos has gone viral and has angered many for its insecure message about the expensive new iPhone. The post was titled “Agreeing to the iPhone 14” and featured three men holding their new Apple phones and lifting their shirts, showing straps on their stomachs implying they had to afford the trendy gadget. He sold his kidney.

The new iPhone is retailing between 41,000 and 45,000 baht, a hefty price tag for a country like Thailand, where the minimum wage is around 9,000 baht per month, let alone Laos where the minimum wage was less than 3,000 baht per month. .

The picture sparked controversy on Facebook and was traced back to a beauty clinic in Laos, which said they had posted it as a parody. He joked that the new iPhone was so expensive that he had to sell his kidney to the doctor. And in Laos, it was taken as a joke, with many commentators joking about how much they could get for a kidney, whether it was even possible to sell an appendix, or what other things they could get with the money. .

But, when a kidney for an iPhone post started going viral in Thailand, online commenters took the photo more seriously and strongly condemned the message sent to young people. He analyzed and contrasted the image, saying that the location of the lesion resembled an appendectomy, and researched to find the photo which was taken at a Vietnamese clinic in Laos.



Some understood it was taken as a joke in Aos, but said it was no laughing matter in Thailand. The Managing Director of the Organ Donation Center under the Thai Red Cross Society called the meem unethical and inappropriate.

In Thailand, organ transplants can only be donated by a close relative under the supervision of the Thai Red Cross, and it is illegal to sell organs. People can sign up to donate their bodies for medical studies, and organs such as livers, hearts and eyes can be harvested only after death.

The director urged people to sign up with the Thai Red Cross Organ Donation Center, saying that 20 million people have signed up to donate their organs when they die, but there are currently about 6,000 people in need of donor organs. There is a waiting list. He was angered by the idea that the state could have an organ trade and said that giving people the idea that they could sell a kidney to get an iPhone was irresponsible.

“There is no organ trade. It’s prohibited. It’s unfair to suggest selling organs, especially to get money to buy an iPhone. It’s morally wrong and unethical.”

Source: Thai Newsroom and Bangkok Post

Click here for more information on health insurance

Source



Related News

Why Jony Ive left Apple for ‘accountants’

The new arrangement freed Mr. Ive from the regular commute to the company's offices in Cupertino. He shifted from almost daily product reviews to an erratic

Skyline is an in-development Nintendo Switch emulator that actually works

There's a lot you can do with an Android smartphone, and the number of emulators you can find for modern and retro systems is just incredible. From older

UAAP Returns to iWantTFC in US, Other International Territories

As ABS-CBN Global partners with Pilipinas Global Network Ltd (PGNL) ​​and Signal TV Inc for streaming Philippine University Athletic Association (UAAP)

Citrus + 1, review: the return of the love story of Yuzu and Mei

Yuzu and Mei return, two high school students and half-sisters, and their sweet and passionate love story in Citrus + 1the long-awaited sequel to Citrus both

Review: ‘After Steve: How Apple Became a Trillion-Dollar Company and Lost Its Spirit,’ by Tripp Mickle

Mikel creates a dense, grainy mosaic of the firm's trials and triumphs, showing us how Apple, built on Ive's successes in the 2000s, became Cook's company in