I am being unfair, but—if a problem is big enough, the society is in some way “built around it” and not just “unable to solve it”. It’s not a good thing or a bad thing. In some way, the shortage of available kidneys is built into the current system of “dealing with health issues”. And it’s not just the official health system; it’s the official health system and everything else. Taking away the donors will have more consequences than just having more people die, because not only the artificial kidneys will remain unavailable, they will be unavailable in a society that doesn’t accommodate the problem.
I am being unfair, but—if a problem is big enough, the society is in some way “built around it” and not just “unable to solve it”. It’s not a good thing or a bad thing. In some way, the shortage of available kidneys is built into the current system of “dealing with health issues”. And it’s not just the official health system; it’s the official health system and everything else. Taking away the donors will have more consequences than just having more people die, because not only the artificial kidneys will remain unavailable, they will be unavailable in a society that doesn’t accommodate the problem.