• Maxnmy's@lemmy.world
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    17 days ago

    Luigi Mangione represents an idea that is uncomfortable to certain people in power. It’s okay to attribute millions of deaths to Hitler when he gives the order to kill and condones the decisions his subordinates make to carry out that order. But they don’t want to let the poors normalize the idea that a healthcare CEO should be considered similarly responsible for many intentional deaths when he gives the order to deny as many claims as possible especially when they are clearly valid and urgently needed. Brian Thompson is responsible for many deaths. It’s not fair to say he isn’t just because he didn’t kill directly with a gun.

    • Diva (she/her)@lemmy.ml
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      17 days ago

      I’m inclined to agree, they don’t want people starting to consider social murder as a crime worth seeking justice for, because the entire government is complicit in a vast network of social murder. An enormous yearly sacrifice all in the name of preserving ‘markets’ for housing, food, transportation, and healthcare.

    • MagicShel@lemmy.zip
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      17 days ago

      At the end of the day, I think the problem is that so many people don’t identify Thompson as a killer. I think if more people saw Thompson as a killer, sympathy would be less controversial.

      I don’t condone vigilante murder, but this is a case where I think the calculus that Mangione did to conclude the benefits of his action outweigh the consequences was probably correct and that there wasn’t a more reasonable way to address his grievance. And if you do something wrong and it turns out for the best, you still did something wrong, so get outta here ya little rascal and don’t let me catch you again.

      • rottingleaf@lemmy.world
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        17 days ago

        I don’t condone vigilante murder

        What do you do when the legal system accumulates errors in its operation further and further? There’s no way, even theoretically, to fix that without breaking rules of that level.

      • sugar_in_your_tea@sh.itjust.works
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        17 days ago

        I think the calculus that Mangione did to conclude the benefits of his action outweigh the consequences was probably correct

        How so?

        There are only so many ways to increase profits in a medical insurance company:

        • increase premiums - limited by law and competition
        • expand customer base - customer acquisition is expensive
        • reduce operating expenses - policy payouts are probably the most expensive operating cost

        Any CEO sees the same options, so killing one won’t really solve anything. You get to send a very public message, yes, how likely is that to change something? Not very, especially with the incoming administration.

        So to me, killing a CEO is very likely to result in either imprisonment and/or death and unlikely to directly cause change. It’ll spark some discussion on the news, but is that really worth throwing your life away?

        Maybe it was the best way he saw to bring immediate attention to his cause, but I don’t think it’s the best way to actually fix anything. He’s a CS student, surely he could learn some hacking skills and access some internal communications that exposes illegal activity, no? That takes longer, but is probably more effective at actually sparking change than murder.

        • ℍ𝕂-𝟞𝟝@sopuli.xyz
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          17 days ago

          He’s a CS student, surely he could learn some hacking skills and access some internal communications that exposes illegal activity, no? That takes longer, but is probably more effective at actually sparking change than murder.

          It would be swept under the rug, maybe get prosecuted and fined for q token amount.

          There are three ways just off the top of my head that this improves the situation.

          It puts fear into the people murdering the masses through policy, other CEOs might think twice now.

          It makes people think and talk about this, and put the topic of healthcare CEOs being murderers into the public discourse.

          It showcases that public support, actually bipartisan public support exists for positive change, it’s just not on the ballot. Some smart politician might figure out how to ride that wave into office.

          • sugar_in_your_tea@sh.itjust.works
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            17 days ago

            other CEOs might think twice now.

            Will they though? Mangione is behind bars, the media has largely sided with the CEO, and other insurance CEOs are probably getting police protection. The net result is probably more spending on personal protection, video security, etc.

            None of this is surprising, and AFAICT, nothing has changed. And I don’t expect anything to change. He’d do far more good working for an insurance company and whistleblowing, hacking in from outside and exposing them, or any other number of things.

            Are those benefits you mentioned worth throwing your life away for? I personally don’t think so, at least not while alternatives exist.

            • wizardbeard@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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              17 days ago

              It made another insurance company walk back terms that were going to set a limit on the amount of time surgeries could take or they wouldn’t cover them. The company announced it the morning after and walked it back that afternoon.

              I’m not sure it justifies things, or the cost this change came at, but it is prettt direct evidence of an insurance company thinking twice

              • sugar_in_your_tea@sh.itjust.works
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                17 days ago

                Maybe in the short term, but they’ll likely try something similar soon. The problem isn’t the policy (which is bad), the problem is the timing. Once Mangione isn’t in the spotlight, they’ll probably try again.

        • Tarquinn2049@lemmy.world
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          17 days ago

          It was step one, not intended to be the entire end-goal. The goal is to make it obvious that profits aren’t the way healthcare should be done, as it is directly at odds with the purpose. Almost every other country in the world has removed profit from healthcare, or never added it in the first place. Even if you want to keep the rest of capitalism, it doesn’t go here.

          He definitely got the conversation started. He got alot of people to say out loud that “they kind of agree with him”. And that is how change happens, when alot of people realise they were already thinking the same thing but didn’t want to be the first one to say it. He opened the flood gates.

          • sugar_in_your_tea@sh.itjust.works
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            17 days ago

            That may be, but my point is that the current state of healthcare costs in the US isn’t “capitalism working as intended,” it’s a culmination of decades of interference resulting in a perfect storm of bad policy. For example:

            • patents keep prices high
            • tax deductions for employer sponsored insurance led to crappy employer insurance being standard
            • ACA covered up many of the problems for those without insurance, which increased problems for those with employer insurance
            • everyone having insurance increases admin costs for providers
            • since insurance companies all want a deal, providers need to obfuscate real prices (cash discount, network discount, etc)
            • care providers have to worry about lawsuits for just doing their job, so they’re more conservative with care options

            And so on. A few simple changes would dramatically improve things IMO:

            • require employers to offer the cash value for any declined benefits
            • offer tax savings for all medical care, regardless of how it’s paid for (premiums outside payroll, costs of direct care, etc)
            • disallow discounts for care, you pay the same whether you use insurance or not
            • require insurance to have simple terms, understandable by the average 8th grader - no networks, no max costs, only deductible, max out of pocket, number of free preventative visits, copay, etc; insurance should compete on service, not covered procedures
            • reduce patent duration so generics can come out sooner

            That won’t fix all of our problems, but it should solve a lot of them. Medicare should exist for the uninsurable and the poor, the rest can get private insurance.

            We should also discuss public healthcare as an option as well, but the above should fix a lot of the problems we have.

        • MagicShel@lemmy.zip
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          17 days ago

          Problem is it wasn’t illegal. So the law is no use here. So exposing the activities they are engaged in right in public is no use. It’s like whistleblowing on Trump colliding with Russia. He did it right in front of everybody and got away with it.

          Also, ultimately profits don’t have to always increase. In fact, it’s an impossibility over the long term without diversifying, and even then growth will slow. There’s not a damn thing wrong with a business that consistently, reliably turns 1B into 1.1B (or whatever).

          killing a CEO is very likely to result in either imprisonment and/or death and unlikely to directly cause change. It’ll spark some discussion on the news, but is that really worth throwing your life away?

          Maybe? I mean a life lived in misery isn’t worth much. At the end of the day, only he can answer whether it was worth the cost, but the rest of us have the opportunity to build on the message he sent. Will we capitalize (lol) on that opportunity? Probably not, but Mangione was undoubtedly a spark. Eventually a spark will catch, but of course it’s never certain who will get burned.

          • sugar_in_your_tea@sh.itjust.works
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            17 days ago

            exposing the activities they are engaged in right in public is no use

            It would piss people off without pushing them to defend someone you murdered. In other words, the message is clearer.

            He did it right in front of everybody and got away with it.

            We don’t have receipts, so it doesn’t hit as hard. Catching someone red handed doing what everyone already assumes they’re doing is a much better call to action than just saying what we’re all thinking.

            ultimately profits don’t have to always increase

            They do if you want to keep your job as CEO, otherwise they’ll replace you with someone who will chase profits.

    • zephorah@lemm.ee
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      17 days ago

      You could also argue that it’s a very American roots level of civil disobedience that harkens back to the 1770s. So it’s hard for them on multiple levels.

      • sunzu2@thebrainbin.org
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        17 days ago

        You could also argue that it’s a very American roots level of civil disobedience that harkens back to the 1770s. So it’s hard for them on multiple levels.

        Which is ironic considering the gun loving right are the bootlickers who ate now crying “murder bad, mmmkay”