If you had Catholic Church style cryonics orgs, interruptions wouldn’t be so bad—you could build vast (dare I say cathedral-sized?) underground cryonics graves with excess volume & boil-off times measured in years or decades. You could analogize to libraries: books decay and need active protection and fires are risks, but can go a few years without (probably) being destroyed. The Church has succeeded in some very long-term libraries.
If you had Catholic Church style cryonics orgs, interruptions wouldn’t be so bad—you could build vast (dare I say cathedral-sized?) underground cryonics graves with excess volume & boil-off times measured in years or decades. You could analogize to libraries: books decay and need active protection and fires are risks, but can go a few years without (probably) being destroyed. The Church has succeeded in some very long-term libraries.
This would work if one has enough people actually signing up for cryonics. As long as very few people are doing so, it isn’t an option.