The surrogacy example originally struck me as very unrealistic cause I presumed it was mostly illegal (it is in Europe but apparently not in some States of the US) and heavily frowned upon here for ethical reasons (but possibly not in the US?). So my original reasoning was that you’d get in far more trouble for applying for many surrogates than for swapping out sperm at the sperm bank.
I guess if this is not the case then it might have been a fetish for those doctors? I’m slightly confused about the matter now what internal experience put them up to it if they’d eschew surrogates while they are legal and socially acceptable in parts of the US.
The other options just seem like relatively risky endeavors that are liable to blow up their succesful sperm swapping projects.
The surrogacy example originally struck me as very unrealistic cause I presumed it was mostly illegal (it is in Europe but apparently not in some States of the US) and heavily frowned upon here for ethical reasons (but possibly not in the US?). So my original reasoning was that you’d get in far more trouble for applying for many surrogates than for swapping out sperm at the sperm bank.
I guess if this is not the case then it might have been a fetish for those doctors? I’m slightly confused about the matter now what internal experience put them up to it if they’d eschew surrogates while they are legal and socially acceptable in parts of the US.
The other options just seem like relatively risky endeavors that are liable to blow up their succesful sperm swapping projects.