Shanadeus said:
And those regulatory gears probably wouldn't turn at all if no one make a fuzz about this and point out how stupid it is to stop this process when it sounds better than the alternatives.
Actually, they are turning.
Read the Dispatch articles ToxicAdam and I have linked. No one is raising a fuss over this process except for that it hasn't been approved yet by the state Department of Health (aside from half-read posters here recoiling at the ickiness factor.) The funeral director filed for a restraining order only so that he could use the process before it had been approved. The judge only denied the restraining order because he felt it wasn't his place to override the Department of Health's established mechanisms for approving methods of handling human remains and because there's no irreparable harm occurring to Edwards' business.
This article indicates is already legal in Minnesota, and the
Columbus Dispatch article indicates that efforts are underway in California, Florida, Nebraska, New Hampshire, and New York to make it legal there too.
Not everything that some random person posts is worthy of getting your dander up. This is one of those. The process isn't approved now, but there's nothing to indicate that it won't soon be approved. That's one of the reasons I took ToxicAdam to task about the mostly content-free article he posted in the OP, this isn't that big of a deal, but there's not enough information in that article to know that.
Shanadeus said:
I wonder where the judge thinks blood from Hospitals ends up.
Read the Dispatch articles. The judge didn't refuse to issue the restraining order because of the sewer issue.