Because Capitalism.If you shoot a man in the street its murder.
If you deny health care to 100,000 people who die of cancer, its just good business.
If you shoot a man in the street its murder.
If you deny health care to 100,000 people who die of cancer, its just good business.
What if you kill 147 people due to food poisoning at a professional business event ? What does that make you?“Kill one man, and you are a murderer. Kill millions of men, and you are a conqueror. Kill them all, and you are a god. Thoughts of a Biologist” ― Jean Rostand
MMMMMmmm sodium!Sure, I can do that.
(She says as she finishes off the bowl of ramen noodles she is eating for lunch)
Luchefer.What if you kill 147 people due to food poisoning at a professional business event ? What does that make you?
Fuck insurers, but fuck the hospitals too. I know too many people who've gone to an ER or something only to have the doctors dismiss them right away, and STILL bill them for hundreds or even thousands of dollars. Even if someone has no insurance, there is no justification for some of the bills.
I've got to admit, I'm impressed by the clarity of the message here.Well, at least the motive seems to be what everyone suspected.
https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2024/12/05/bullet-casings-unitedhealthcare-ceo-brian-thompson-shooting/76793218007/
arstechnica.com
The billing is a problem, but I do find it annoying that some people treat the ER like a Doctor. The primary job of the ER is stabilizing an emergency until your regular Doctor can fix the problem, later.Fuck insurers, but fuck the hospitals too. I know too many people who've gone to an ER or something only to have the doctors dismiss them right away, and STILL bill them for hundreds or even thousands of dollars. Even if someone has no insurance, there is no justification for some of the bills.
Of course, but I know people who NEEDED to be in the ER and were still brushed off. 2 different women I know had kidney stones and had to beg them for an x-ray to prove it since the lazy staff just wanted to send them home.The billing is a problem, but I do find it annoying that some people treat the ER like a Doctor. The primary job of the ER is stabilizing an emergency until your regular Doctor can fix the problem, later.
Its also part of why Urgent Care facilities have become more common. Because they are sort of an in between to serve the purpose many go to the ER for (non life threatening harm).
People with no insurance and no paid time off usually wait until they are seriously ill and have nowhere else to go.The billing is a problem, but I do find it annoying that some people treat the ER like a Doctor. The primary job of the ER is stabilizing an emergency until your regular Doctor can fix the problem, later.
Its also part of why Urgent Care facilities have become more common. Because they are sort of an in between to serve the purpose many go to the ER for (non life threatening harm).
From another story on that page:![]()
Fake bomb threat targets 2 Maple Grove homes owned by family of slain UHC executive Brian Thompson
Police are classifying the incident, coming one day after Thompson was killed in New York City, as a case of “swatting.”www.startribune.com
Uhhh .... those who knew him must be a little dense; I don't find myself puzzled at all. Like Detrius, I think the shooter explained himself quite clearly and succinctly. I don't support what he did, but I think he made it quite clear why he did it.Those who knew Brian Thompson struggled to make sense of what authorities described as a targeted attack on him in New York City.
You don't need a weatherman to know which way the wind blows.From another story on that page:
Uhhh .... those who knew him must be a little dense; I don't find myself puzzled at all. Like Detrius, I think the shooter explained himself quite clearly and succinctly. I don't support what he did, but I think he made it quite clear why he did it.
That's all very well, but what do you think this assassination will achieve in the long run? It puts United Healthcare to the inconvenience of having to find a new CEO, but they will doubtless achieve that without too much difficulty and then carry on maximising their profits as they were doing before Mr Thompson's death.From another story on that page:
Uhhh .... those who knew him must be a little dense; I don't find myself puzzled at all. Like Detrius, I think the shooter explained himself quite clearly and succinctly. I don't support what he did, but I think he made it quite clear why he did it.
It seems clear, too, that he was not a suicide terrorist. This guy had a clean, smart getaway plan and seems to have executed it. I won't be surprised if he has nothing more to say on the topic, nor will I be surprised if he stays at large for a long time.
It somehow brings to mind a chilling Leonard Cohen song, First We Take Manhattan. It hints that the narrator is a terrorist.
They sentenced me to 20 years of boredomFor trying to change the system from withinI'm coming now, I'm coming to reward themFirst we take Manhattan, then we take BerlinI'm guided by a signal in the heavensI'm guided by this birthmark on my skinI'm guided by the beauty of our weaponsFirst we take Manhattan, then we take Berlin ...I don't like your fashion business, misterAnd I don't like these drugs that keep you thinI don't like what happened to my sisterFirst we take Manhattan, then we take Berlin
Leonard said, "I think it means exactly what it says. It is a terrorist song. I think it's a response to terrorism. There's something about terrorism that I've always admired. The fact that there are no alibis or no compromises. That position is always very attractive. I don't like it when it's manifested on the physical plane – I don't really enjoy the terrorist activities – but Psychic Terrorism.'"
That's a question that only the shooter can answer, right? Cause none of us have shot a CEO, so we obviously already believe that it isn't that effective a deterrent for insurance abuses.That's all very well, but what do you think this assassination will achieve in the long run? It puts United Healthcare to the inconvenience of having to find a new CEO, but they will doubtless achieve that without too much difficulty and then carry on maximising their profits as they were doing before Mr Thompson's death.