I'm finally done ;_;
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please don't
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And what I'm saying is, take that person from a third world country, offer them food, lodging, and money, and treat the fatal diseases/ailments that can easily be treated, and heck, give them all the money you would've spent on experimentation, too, why not, for the sake of conversation. Then see what sort of difference they make in the world. These are not animals we're talking about -- their lives are every bit as important as the people you're trying to cure.
I know it's not intentional, but your premise is inhumane from the very first. "You let them take the experiment, they get the hope of living." In what way is that a reasonable bargaining position? Really sit back and think about it. That's monstrous.
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For some. For others it will violate the single most important ethical law in medicine -- "First, do no harm."
Now it's important to note -- human trials do happen, on a volunteer basis. I was almost placed in one (ketamine brain drip to treat regional sympathetic dystrophy -- something I'm pretty sure I didn't even have, but they were perfectly eager to sign me up anyway). One in ten of the people who volunteered for that trial got some temporary relief; all of them got, you know, ketamine in their brains, and all the wonderful things that does.
So. From a first-hand almost human lab rat -- no thanks, I'm good. The rules exist for several important reasons. Human experimentation is a smart thing to regulate, and we regulate it almost hard enough. If you fling wide that door, and if you're lucky enough to be a statistical outlier which actually finds a cure for anything at all, your panacea is made out of the shattered lives of everyone who got the shitty Drug 1.0. My advice is to take that energy you would have used on Mad Science, and instead use it to mow someone's lawn or take out their trash, or carry their groceries inside. Start with caring before you jump right to "curing at any and all costs."