Good SAT Scores Lead To Higher Egg Donor Prices 175
alphadogg writes "Analysis from Georgia Institute of Technology of college newspaper egg donor ads showed that higher payments offered to egg donors correlated with higher SAT scores. 'Holding all else equal, an increase of 100 SAT points in the score of a typical incoming student increased the compensation offered to oocyte donors at that college or university by $2,350,' writes researcher Aaron D. Levine in a paper published in the March-April issue of the Hastings Center Report. Concerned about eggs being treated as commodities, and worried that big financial rewards could entice women to ignore the risks of the rigorous procedures required for harvesting, the American Society for Reproductive Medicine discourages compensation based on donors' personal characteristics. The society also discourages any payments over $10,000."
Let the free market decide (Score:5, Insightful)
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I don't think society has any legitimate interest at stake here that is not covered by allowing the free market to set prices for human kidneys. It should be interesting to see what kidney buyers will place real $ value on.
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That might be an interesting argument if human eggs were necessary for the continued health and well-being of an individual, as kidneys are.
It may be disappointing for someone who is infertile to not be able to have a child, but it is by no means lethal; it certainly is lethal to not have a kidney. As a result, allowing market forces to determine which infertile people get to go to extreme lengths to have a child is much more reasonable and fair than allowing market forces to determine who gets to live or d
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It may be disappointing for someone who is infertile to not be able to have a child, but it is by no means lethal
Thing is some people rather would die early than die childless.
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"Rather" implies a choice. I'm sure that if I didn't have a working kidney I'd "rather" live, but unfortunately I don't think I'd have much of a choice.
People can learn to live with disappointment, they can't learn to live without kidneys.
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"Rather" implies a choice.
And often that choice exists.
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Preventing people (poor or otherwise) from marketing whatever goods or services they have available to them is always harmful. Even child prostitution is often a choice between sex or starvation/neglect.
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If child prostitution is a choice between that and starvation that society has failed. Pure and simple the society that allows that is no better than the pedophiles that use these services.
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Then fucking feed them. We pay to have food destroyed in this country, buy it and ship it over there instead. The problem isn't that they can't sell their kidneys- the problem is people who think its acceptable to force them into that choice.
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"For the most part" food prices are set by the market... Except for massive subsidies for staple foods, secondary factors like welfare and foodstamps enabling people who can't afford food to have food, etc. There are also varying tiers of food as far as pricing goes - I can eat incredibly cheaply (and healthfully) if I'm willing to go through some effort and cook with various beans and cheap veggies, or I can spend staggering sums - more than some people's monthly wage in the US - on a single meal.
The marke
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Apparently it's morally wrong for rich people to get preferential treatment, even if the total number of lives saved by kidney transplants is the same regardless of who gets them.
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Yes, because the free market would never try to optimize a cost to zero. It's never killed unionists, or all but enslaved third world labor. The Free Market loves us, it wouldn't do that.
Reality of the free market- people in third world nations would be killing each other for their kidneys, selling it for tens of dollars, and you'd see it resold for tens of thousands in the US and Europe.
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Seems to me there is a reasonable middle ground in which the market could exist and be regulated to prevent abuse, rather than be banned. The US has free speech yet bans certain abuses (slander, "fire in a crowded theater", etc). Similarly, most "free markets" throughout history have been regulated.
There are only so many people willing to donate a major organ for the benefit of somebody they don't know. There are many more who would be willing if they could use it to help send their kid to college, etc.
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Once again- if their kid is smart enough to go to college, why don't we help him go instead of forcing his parents to sell a fucking kidney. That's why we have Pell grants, student loans, scholarships, work study programs, federal aid, etc.
This isn't like selling a house or pawning the family silver. Kidneys don't grow back, and lack of one can take years off of your life. Its one thing to donate it to someone in need- that's an act of heroism. It's another to put someone in a situation where that's t
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Once again- if their kid is smart enough to go to college, why don't we help him go instead of forcing his parents to sell a fucking kidney. That's why we have Pell grants, student loans, scholarships, work study programs, federal aid, etc.
So "they can choose to give their kid a future at the expense of some health risks, and I can choose to live at the cost of some money" is deeply immoral, while "I can be forced to give them money, and hope they donate anyway" is just and proper.
I never understood t
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I don't think society has any legitimate interest at stake here that is not covered by allowing the free market to set prices for human kidneys. It should be interesting to see what kidney buyers will place real $ value on.
I agree.
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However, I hope there is some maximum number of children that any single person is able to (indirectly) have. If it gets to the point that thousands of people have the same biological mother or father, which technically should be quiet easy now or very soon, we are going to see a lot of inbreeding problems.
Not a new phenomenon (Score:2, Insightful)
This is a surprise? Just take a look around any big name campus - there will usually be some kind of ads posted looking for egg donors. I'm a student at Columbia University and I've seen posters offering $18,000 for eggs from any Columbia student for years.
I have VERY high SAT scores (Score:5, Funny)
I called them and asked about what their going rate was for a high-SAT scorer like me, and they offered me $12,000!
Things went badly when I asked if the eggs had to be organic, and what size they should be, and was styrofoam OK or did they prefer paper cartons. Oh, and when they found out I was a guy.
Sexist bastards.
Re:I have VERY high SAT scores (Score:4, Funny)
I called them ...
Things went badly when ...they found out I was a guy.
I'm amused that they didn't pick up on that until you actually had to tell them you were a guy. ;-)
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Exactly how far through the phone conversation did they get before they figured out you were a guy?
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In the immortal words of F. Leghorn: "It's a joke, Son."
Triumph Of The Nerds (Score:4, Insightful)
This should lead to geeks lessening jocks' reproductive advantages.
Tuition (Score:3, Insightful)
Egg donation: yet another way that a high SAT score help you get through college.
Cha-Ching! (Score:4, Funny)
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I don't think you donate just one. I think itis $35K per procedure.
Anyone familiar with what is involved with "donating" these eggs?
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I don't think you donate just one. I think itis $35K per procedure.
Anyone familiar with what is involved with "donating" these eggs?
It's not like it is for men - wham, bam, checks clears in 6 months man. The donor woman gets drugged with the unfun kinds of drugs - hormones and what not to make her the same batshit crazy menstral cycle as the rich woman. Then, after months of that, they reach up (so to speak) and scoop out as many eggs as they can. They try to implant the rich woman. Lather, rinse, repeat, as needed. You don't get paid until (and if) the rich woman gets knocked up properly. It's pretty messed up. But if the choice is tha
Re:Cha-Ching! (Score:5, Informative)
Specifically, the woman will typically be placed on an oral contraceptive that suppresses ovulation to "stabilize" her natural menstrual cycle. Then she will come off it at a known point so that her ovulation can be managed with about a 12 hour accuracy.
During this time, she will typically take drug that stimulates ovarian activity -- Follistim is common -- so that she produces multiple mature egg follicles during a single cycle. She'll typically have a few vaginal ultrasounds during the cycle to estabish follicle count and development. Finally, at the pointed time she'll take a dose of medicine that causes the eggs to be finished/matured/released. The following day she goes in for a procedure where a large syringe punctures the vaginal wall and retreives the eggs.
If you remember nothing else from this writeup, these are the key points:
- woman takes a fuckton of ovary-exploding drugs
- doctor puts enomrous syringe THROUGH THE SIDE OF THE VAGINA
Re:Cha-Ching! (Score:5, Funny)
- doctor puts enomrous syringe THROUGH THE SIDE OF THE VAGINA
Forgive my apparent lack of knowledge, but FOR GOD SAKES ISN'T THERE ANOTHER WAY IN?!!
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1) Marry chick with high IQ
2) Train her to do whatever you tell her
3) ???
4) Profit!
Gentlemen, I think we've figured out what to put in step 3. Harvest away!!!
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1) Marry chick with high IQ
2) Train her to do whatever you tell her
3) ???
4) Profit!
Gentlemen, I think we've figured out what to put in step 3. Harvest away!!!
I think you'll run into trouble before step 1...
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As the article shows, it only takes a small modification:
1a) Find chicks with high SAT scores
1b) Offer big $$ to marry you
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Except that if every woman would do it, they would only get $0.000,53 per egg. ;)
Why discourage this? (Score:4, Insightful)
I think that the worries expressed betray a double standard. How does it make sense to worry about high-SAT women "ignoring the health dangers" of forced ovulation, when you don't worry about low-SAT women ignoring the same dangers and getting a tenth of the money for the ordeal? To be clear: these people don't want women to stop donating eggs. They don't want high-SAT women donating eggs for a lot of money. But the risk in each donation is the same!
In any case, an egg donor will suddenly get a quick and large pile of money. I think the real question should be: How will the money be spent? If the donor gets $50,000 and uses it to help pay for three semesters of her Princeton tuition, I don't see a problem. If another donor, who is not in college, spends $5,000 on shoes and handbags, I don't see a great deal of good having been done.
I know someone who has donated an egg, and she was actually pretty sick for a part of the procedure. Smart women in Princeton, who have other options, will not want to undergo something like this unless you offer them more money. That just seems like a fact. But if the people who want the eggs have the money, and their satisfaction is increased by the knowledge that their donor is academically talented, and the donor herself will use the money to develop her talents further, it's a clear case of "everyone wins."
So why does the American Society for Reproductive Medicine need to shit on this optimal outcome? I think they should be encouraging it!
Duh (Score:5, Interesting)
Back in college our daily newspaper had standing offers in the $15-50k range for eggs of a woman above a certain height, below a certain weight, and above a certain SAT score.
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I am trying to decide if you are being perfectly serious here and exactly on topic, or if this is a witty commentary on "dating" and the commoditization of women -- whereby men know what they are looking for and many talentend and intelligent women focus on leaving college with their Mrs. Degree, as it proves to be more profitable long-term than the diploma the university issues.
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While I can't speak for the person you're responding to, I can say that when I was in college I considered donating eggs. Once I found out what the procedure was I decided not to do it, but I got over a dozen phone calls asking me to reconsider, and each time I was offered more money. The last offer I got was for $37.5K - which still wasn't worth it to me for the whole process I would have had to go through. This was back in 1991, and I imagine the prices have gone up since then.
I'm 5'11", was #150 at the t
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That's honestly amazing. If you were a woman today with a fertility problem such that you needed an egg retreival done from your own body, for your own use, and were paying 100% out of pocket.. it would cost you under $8k for the entire procedure and medicines. Additional stuff [like doing an IVF fertilization and re-inserting an embryo] would cost more, of course.
So the high price offered for donor eggs must be attributed to the following:
- the tremendous invasiveness of the procedure, to be borne by som
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Part of the pricing was, actually, exactly that - I am, genetically speaking, rather lucky, and my parents and grandparents were fairly accomplished. I filled out a rather detailed screener and had a physical as part of the process before I dropped out. I think my parents and grandparents were a big part:
- One case of cancer in my family, ever, in the case of my grandfather who used to work with radiation; he died at age 94.
- No heart attacks or other coronary disease in my family.
- Other grandfather died o
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The funny thing about the donor egg market is that people ought to be looking at _your_ mom as an additional fitness indicator: IIRC, all of your immature egg cells were present when you were in-utero.
What do you mean? The eggs form while still in utero, but they come from the babies cells which contain both maternal & paternal genes.
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Being 5'11" is actually a selling point? That seems very strange to me, considering how powerful the sexual selection pressures are for women to be between 5'2" and 5'4". To the point that many women have an avowed preference for being 8" shorter than their partner. The selection criteria of the prospective parents seems very unusual to me.
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Not really - both were fairly tall, so that's one part of it. But there's also this societal thing where taller people are seen, rightly or wrongly, as being more serious, capable, charismatic, what-have-you.
As for the 8" shorter - I've actually dated a guy who was almost 7' tall, and it was fucking hilarious. We went as Frankenstein & Bride of for Halloween and rocked the look. I've also dated a guy who was 5'4" and that was likewise pretty funny - jokes about him needing mountain climbing gear etc. I
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Why Mr. Schrute! How's life on the beet farm?
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So that’s the reason women do so much stretching in their aerobic courses?
JJ's Fertility and SAT Cram Course (Score:4, Funny)
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It seems ironic that women of higher learning who might, as some suggest, fund their education from their ovaries, would need to go to a fertility clinic after their successful education and careers that kept them way from the maternity ward until their 30s or 40s.
What if they were not planning to have kids? May as well get "something" for those eggs.
So the medical quacks are all bundled up because the "best" chicks get too much money. Little concern that the "not so best" get a fraction of the money. And no care at all that some chicks actually have to pay money to get their tubes tied.
What's this worth? (Score:5, Funny)
SATs over 750 each
Certified Mensa IQ
Concert pianist
Well endowed
High metablosim - hint, hint
Blonde, blue eyes
Starting bid: $youcantaffordit
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SATs over 750 each
...
High metablosim
For some strange reason I find myself doubting the veracity of your SAT claims...
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SATs over 750 each Certified Mensa IQ High metablosim
Can you explain to me what a metablosim is? I must not be the genius you are since I've never heard of that word.
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High metablosim - hint, hint
Cons: ;)
- An F in grammar!
- More full of himself than a French-American-Nazi-hybrid.
Quality (Score:2, Insightful)
You pay for quality, and this is just an example of that. You wouldn't pay $15 for a McD's burger, at least most people wouldn't, but a Red Robin (or similar high end) one could command that sort of price.
I know some people might think that's horrible, but the cold-hard truth is that some people are higher quality than others. We might be equal before the law, and have equal rights, but when people are given a choice in potential breeding partners, they will opt for as high as they can afford. In the soc
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Genetics and prejudice (Score:3)
So we know that certain people have higher risks of developing certain diseases based on genetic factors, such as gender (color-blindness in men) or 'race' (Tay-Sachs in Ashkenazi jews). People are even willing to pay more for eggs or sperm from people with high SAT scores or PhD's. Yet, when a Harvard University President suggests that maybe certain aspects of intelligence are based on genetics, it causes an uproar.
I'm not suggesting that a certain race or sex is inferior to another, but why is the mere suggestion that intelligence is based on genetics (and therefore gives inherent benefits to certain genetic groups) considered so taboo? Can't we at least consider, discuss, and perform rigorous research on the subject?
Re:Genetics and prejudice (Score:4, Insightful)
In case you haven't noticed, culture is a pretty significant confounding variable for "race" (which is also a poorly-defined concept).
Signature (Score:2)
I am frustrated to note that my Linux box does not allow me to cat /dev/mem
# cat /dev/mem | strings | grep -i llama /dev/mem: Operation not permitted
cat:
This means I cannot check for llamas myself, and yet your signature makes me suspicious that my RAM, too, may be full of llamas. This would explain the recent slowness of my box.
Obviously one can't scrub the llamas out of RAM without finding them, but are there any open source programs which encourage the llamas to leave?
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* This avoids debating what "intelligence" is, and is not really controversial due to inevitable cultural biases in t
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There has been rigorous research on the matter, but the results aren't politically correct so they're considered bogus.
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The sensationalist headlines ignore the rigor put into the research.
So do the mouth-breathers who have the headline tattooed under their "88".
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Hmm are you talking about the same Harvard president who suggested that the reason there were less postdoc women was because they were innately inferior?
www.dailyprincetonian.com [dailyprincetonian.com]
There are facts that women are under-represented in a lot of careers, particularly engineering, but rather than funding rigorous studies "on whether or not women lack the same mental abilities as men", shouldn't we be looking at social problems? Perhaps those women were told at a young age that they couldn't be good at math, or en
How horrible is the donation process? (Score:2)
My coworker suggests that the process involves a roughly six month process of pretty nasty drugs, which makes the money a lot less attractive.
Are these offers generally for a few eggs, for fifty, for one which implants properly, for one which comes to term, etc?
Irony (Score:2)
So they're worried that the smart people are going to act stupid and risk their health when offered an extra $2300?
You can make money, but don't! (Score:2, Interesting)
(says one geek with laissez-faire ethics...)
Lifetime earning potential (Score:2)
Not surprisingly, higher SAT scores correlate with a higher eventual annual income, something to the tune of $20k/yr per 40 points [nytimes.com] in the combined SAT score (critical reading + math + writing). Assuming wages increase at the inflation rate of 3%, income is earned from ages 23 through 65, and a discount rate of 10%, the average additional lifetime earning potential of +100 points equates to $162k in present dollars.
Obviously not all eggs result in a baby; only about 10% of eggs result in a live birth. [advancedfertility.com] Even
SATs? I remember them. (Score:2)
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If they offer you $35,000 for all of your eggs, take the offer.
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DON'T DO IT (Score:4, Interesting)
This is just another example of where the family court system is biased against men. Women automatically get custody of children, or more custody than the man, unless they are on crack or something and this can be proven. Alimony is a total insult; it's the notion that a woman has a legal right to get used to a particular lifestyle that her husband provided, and therefore her former husband has to pay her money after the divorce to make sure she doesn't have to get used to what her income alone can provide. If that was really fair, the woman would have to continue having sex with the man after the divorce, since that was the lifestyle he was used to when married, but fairness is not the goal here. Imagine a couple suing the female egg donor for child support after using her egg to produce a baby. It would be laughed out of court. But women have successfully sued men for child support for donating sperm.
Warning to men - it might look like easy money for something you do anyway (masturbating) but seriously, it's a bad idea.
Re:DON'T DO IT (Score:4, Informative)
You just need a signed document saying so.
Most of those cases have been closed now, in favour of the men not paying child support anymore.
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If that was really fair, the woman would have to continue having sex with the man after the divorce, since that was the lifestyle he was used to when married
Married men accustomed to regular sex, You are obviously not married.
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Lots of married men are accustomed to regular sex. Look at Tiger Woods or Bill Clinton, for example.
(I'd apologize to my wife here but I don't think she reads slashdot)
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75% success rate of what, exactly?
Getting laid on my birthday?
That, I could believe.
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Alimony is a total insult; it's the notion that a woman has a legal right to get used to a particular lifestyle that her husband provided, and therefore her former husband has to pay her money after the divorce to make sure she doesn't have to get used to what her income alone can provide.
Put the shoe on the other foot. I married my ex right out of college. She went to medical school and I started work doing contract programming starting in 1995. I did really well through Y2K and on into 2003. I quit working when our son was born and she only had 6 months left of a general surgery residency at the Mayo Clinic. Afterwords we moved to her home town in rural Montana. 4 years later she and one of the orthopedic surgeons in town become an item.
During the 9 years she went to medical school a
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There have been court cases where the mother who was artificially inseminated with donated sperm was later able to track down the man who donated the sperm, and successfully sue him for child support.
Mmhm. What's the source on this? I remember a case like that happening once in Germany about ten years back, when the sperm donor was a personal friend of the woman receiving the sperm, but that was the only one I ever heard of.
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Those cases all involve known sperm donors who are friends of the mothers, participated without a contract, and then continued to be involved in the child's life afterwards explicitly as their father. In the case of clinics, they specifically make you sign paperwork absolving them of all liability.
No, about the only thing guys get for it would be (Score:2)
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It depends. How long is your SAT? If it's over 10 inches then yes.
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People are generally looking for one of two things(or a combination) in a donor: A) Approximately like them. Unless you want to have the "No, we didn't adopt; but I shoot blanks/am a poison-womb" chat with everybody who sees your children, you usually want a donor or donors who are phenotypically similar to
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A) Approximately like them.
That has the interesting supply and demand effect that perhaps, the only people whom can afford such advanced fertility treatments, are those whom are highly paid / highly educated / in certain social classes.
Some trailer park residents with a combined ACT score of 10, might want the whole advanced fertility clinic egg donation thingy with their neighbor whom also coincidentally also achieved a single digit score, but they are not covered for the treatment and certainly don't have cash on the barrel ... so
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i've thought about the egg/sperm donor thing as a sort of experiment in socio-genetics. Instead of having kids with my wife, which would produce another smart honkey but a bit on the short and short sighted side, i would find sperm and egg donors. Each would be a different race from us and each other. Definitely would want donors on the right half of the IQ bell curve. We'd have a smart mixed race kid, who would prolly be good looking.
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Thanks to the, er, miracles of globalization, you can get a surrogate mother in India for $2500 to $6500 [csmonitor.com]. That way you can, at relatively low cost, you can produce numerous donor combinations, without any messy biological involvement on you or your wife's part. The bigger the sample size, the more scientific the science!
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You do know, of course, that offspring of your union are likely to regress to the mean, and be less smart than either of you, right?
This is why I've chosen only below-average-intelligence women to be my baby mommas, so that I'll be more likely to have genius children.
Well, that, and they are the only ones who will sleep with me.
Common Sense (Score:3, Insightful)
Or you could actually adopt. That would be the sensible solution.
Re:Numbers don't lie but they are vague. (Score:4, Insightful)
Maybe you missed the part about holding everything else equal.
"all else equal, an increase of 100 SAT points in the score of a typical incoming student increased the compensation offered to oocyte donors at that college or university by $2,350"
So I would presume they would compare across the same schools and adjust accordingly.
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Smart enough? Possibly, but remember that this guy [wikipedia.org] went to both Yale (BA) and Harvard (MBA). Don't know about his GPA or SAT scores though... or whether that says more/less about him or the schools.
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I might be trolled for this, but he wasn't always a bumbling idiot. Not that I've voted for him or condone his choices but as a younger man, he wasn't what you would call stupid.
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I don't know about that. This link, The Resume of George W. Bush (the early years) [monkeydyne.com], from another follow-up post, would seem to indicate otherwise. I can't authenticate its accuracy, but have seen some of the items listed in other articles.
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This is the funny thing. In the "How do I get an entry level programming job" the university you go to seems to make a difference. But when we look at individual cases, we can see clear exceptions where the school does nothing to help the individual. It is only in aggregate that the school's name is valuable. This is partly due to applicant self-selection, and partly do to the entrance process selecting people based on prior performance.
I had the option to go to a school with a minimum requirement of 12
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Smart enough? Possibly, but remember that this guy [wikipedia.org] went to both Yale (BA) and Harvard (MBA). Don't know about his GPA or SAT scores though... or whether that says more/less about him or the schools.
It takes some brains to convince everyone that you're stupid, to make them underestimate you, so that behind the scenes you can do whatever you like with little or no scrutiny. It takes brains and a ruthless determination to get your way no matter what it takes, even at the expense of widespread ridicule. It also takes some brains to exploit a climate of fear and use time-tested tactics (such as calling your opponents "unpatriotic") to virtually guarantee that the Congress will pass whatever legistlation
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Based on the (unverified) resume for GWB posted in another follow-up (some of which I have read elsewhere), I'd probably believe otherwise. However, his rise to greatness, despite massive, repeated failures, was apparently due to the support of friends, family and those around him, like Cheney.
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Lots of Smarts != Lots of Common Sense
In fact, I have somewhat noticed the reverse in many situations. Granted, a smart person has the capacity to better think about a situation and reason out all the possible problems, but, most people don't do that to begin with.
Besides, high SAT scores != smart, either.
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Yeah, paying that much for a donor egg would render your intellect questionable
Raising a child is an expensive proposition. It's somewhere in the $200k range [babycenter.com], just for the food, shelter, clothing, education, and medical care for 18 years. Then you toss on all the prenatal, neonatal, and postpartum medical bills, along with college, and it all adds up to a huge pile of money. Further, that assumes nothing goes wrong (no teen pregnancy or delinquency, no serious medical problems). At that point, spending an extra 1% for better genes doesn't seem as extravagant, and is probably a good
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At that point, spending an extra 1% for better genes doesn't seem as extravagant, and is probably a good investment.
So, what makes that extra 1% a better investment if the donor just gets a better SAT? There is No correlation and that's my point. For all you know, if you have the kid and let him sit in front of the TV, eating Cheetos and playing the PS3, he'll probably become one of those bottom 25% achievers. He may get lucky and be a genius, but you don't know that based on the fact that the donor has a high SAT score. It is non-sequitur! I might as well be saying "I go to movies all the time. If you buy my eggs
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Aw, who am I kidding? I paid the "nurse" $20 just to give me the damn specimen cup, and another $40 to smack me around a little bit to get me going.