Posted on 03/23/2025 11:42:03 PM PDT by Morgana
Video is 60 minutes long
This youtuber, Stephanie Soo, has an excellent way of telling true crime stories.
Three Thai women escaped a “human egg farm” in the country of Georgia.
(Excerpt) Read more at youtube.com ...
For those of you who don’t want to watch the video, from Lifenews.com:
Women Escape “Human Egg Farm,” Expose Horrific Trafficking Scheme
Three Thai women who escaped a “human egg farm” in the country of Georgia are now speaking out about the horrific abuse they endured. Lured by false promises of surrogacy opportunities, they were instead held captive, forcibly injected with hormones, and subjected to repeated egg extractions for black-market IVF sales.
The women were deceived through fake surrogacy ads on Facebook. Each was promised between 400,000 and 600,000 baht (roughly $12,000-$18,000) per child they would carry for an overseas couple. They were told they would be housed by the intended parents and provided with proper contracts.
However, upon arrival, they were taken to a house packed with up to 100 other women—no couples and no contracts. One survivor described the nightmare:
“They took us to a house where there were 60 to 70 Thai women. There were no surrogacy contracts or parents. Women were injected with hormones, anesthetized, and their eggs extracted by machine every month.”
Many victims were never paid, and those who attempted to escape were forced to buy their freedom by paying a ransom or told they would be arrested. The women’s passports were confiscated upon arrival, leaving them with no way to leave.
One woman was able to gather enough money to pay her ransom and notify authorities. On January 30, the Pavena Foundation for Children and Women, in collaboration with Interpol and Thai authorities, rescued three victims. But countless others remain trapped.
Diana Thomas, CEO of The World Egg and Sperm Bank, revealed how these trafficked eggs are deceptively marketed to Western buyers.
“It’s all a lie. They manipulate donor profiles so customers don’t feel guilty about using eggs from poor, abused women.”
https://www.lifenews.com/2025/03/22/women-escape-human-egg-farm-expose-horrific-trafficking-scheme/
Um, what were they then doing with the eggs?
Fertilizing and growing them for a few months to make organs and other harvestables?
Biomedical is not that advanced yet. They probably had customers lined up and took the eggs on an ongoing basis for implantation of paying infertile women.
If it sounds too good to be true... Then it probably isn’t.
These women were being offered $12,000+ to do nothing... So the concept that it nay not be legit comes to mind for anybody out there with a half a mind.
Isn’t this approaching Aldous Huxley’s book Brave New World and with Big Pharma providing the Soma it’s starting to become reality
There are lot of people doing IVF who will pay for five figures for each egg.
Not fertilizing them - just selling the unfertilized ova to infertile couples (where the wife is eggless). The ova are then fertilized with the husband's sperm and the embryos implanted in the wife (assuming that at least her uterus is still functional) or into the womb of a paid surrogate mother who is then not genetically related to the child she later gives birth to, and which is then confiscated (as per their contract) by the paying couple.
"Making organs and other harvestables," as you suggested would also be possible, but is less likely, I'd wager.
Regards,
Just a guess but probably a big demand for surrogate moms to carry what are probably sold as “designer eggs” for all the same sex couples out there who can’t get kids naturally. Fertilize and implant in a surrogate. Surrogate mom then has no DNA connection to the child and very little legal say. Egg donor has no idea the egg ever got fertilized.
In addition to normal but infertile couples who don’t want to risk adopting kids that have fetal alcohol syndrome or other issues.
Jonty30: Biomedical is not that advanced yet.
Growing full-grown, functional human organs (e.g., for the purpose of transplantation into ailing adults) would, indeed, represent a more-advanced procedure that is probably not yet feasible - at least in the Black Market. I suppose that one could create embryos suitable for genetic research, medical experimentation, vaxx testing, and the like - but it might be difficult marketing them to legit pharmaceutical companies.
They probably had customers lined up and took the eggs on an ongoing basis for implantation of into paying infertile women.
Bingo! (See my post #8.)
Regards,
“Um, what were they then doing with the eggs?”
That is the 64 Thousand dollar question.
Is this the first step in the Tlielaxu turning them into Axolotl Tanks?
(the spice must flow...)
I thought one of the big ethical problems with IVF was a SURPLUS of eggs and embryos harvested from the mother that would have to be stored in a deep freeze or eventually killed to avoid storage fees. There should be plenty of eggs/embryos in need of a womb.
Georgia USA or Georgia 🇬🇪 Russian satellite?
Th country, not the state.
I’m sure that some couples would seek out children who are from Thai mothers, but many thousands? This seems more like a mill for something else. It’s super creepy.
And it makes you wonder about the 350,000 women and girls who’ve gone missing with border crossings. Some could be victims of baby mills.
Bkmrk
This is the stuff mystery and horror novels and films are made of, except it’s real. It seems like every day some new form of human abuse arises. A new low in morality, just disgusting.
The surplus of embryos is a real (ethical) problem.
But there is no surplus of unfertilized ova. I see no ethical dilemma in discarding surplus ova - just as I see no ethical dilemma in a 13-year-old boy "discarding" excess sperm.
I suppose that, in some fertility clinics, the women undergoing fertility treatments might sometimes be asked if they'd like to donate their unused ova - just as some men donate sperm in sperm banks. But since it's the lowest-quality ova that are discarded, perhaps there's no market for them.
These women in the West undergoing fertility treatments are often already in their forties - so their eggs are no longer Grade A to begin with.
Any unused embryos are likewise probably viewed as "not up to snuff" and therefore unceremoniously flushed down the toilet - which I view with ethical horror.
Regards,
My first thought is China's low birthrate problem. But there's also the problem of too few young women in China.
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