I finished
emailing 1.2 million people about this. The responses were depressing as hell. Overwhelmingly, the answer to:
is absolutely nothing. A mere handful of people, out of 1.2 million, offered some type of small contribution. Even philanthropic individuals like Jimmy Donaldson (AKA MrBeast) who have a personal interest in FMT (Crohn's disease) show zero interest in lifting a finger to do anything about it. A majority of people who responded to the email seem to be illiterate; including people with PhDs and MDs.
I know from experience that some people will read that and accuse me of being insulting. It's not an insult. It's a dry, factual statement.
No one seems to give a shit about chronic disease. I think it's become entirely normalized. Someone told me "
I need HM so I can afford insulin for my diabetes". I responded "
No, you need HM so you no longer have to purchase insulin". They insisted that no, they just need the money; the diabetes isn't the problem.
You give people the choice of $500 for your poop or a cure for chronic disease, and everyone chooses $500. How fucking delusional I was to think a cure for chronic disease would be highly sought after to the point of being priceless.
One of the Remission Biome guys made a nice tweet about it, and no one did anything.
My experiences and observations continue to be stunningly dystopian and nonsensical, to the point where I continue to question whether this is real
https://www.businessinsider.com/the-matrix-do-we-live-in-a-simulation-2019-4.
I am starting to believe the NPC meme. People seem programmed for a narrow set of behaviors, and if you try to get them to do anything outside of that they either don't respond or spit out some nonsensical error dialog.
Telling people they have a one-in-a-million chance doesn't seem to have discouraged anyone from trying. Nor has it raised the quality of applicant. To the contrary in fact; many people read it and then sent in a request to review their denials because they felt they were the one-in-a-million donor. They were not.