• null@slrpnk.net
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    10 hours ago

    Not a fantasy, it happens all the time.

    Source?

    As for how much they “paid out” is irrelevant.

    Huh? It’s extremely relevant… The claim is that people are paying their premiums and then having their claims denied while the insurance company pockets the difference…

    And all of that is cute, but you’ve still failed to map your comparison to murder with a gun to prove that it was morally justified to murder Brian Thompson. Are you gonna get to that part ever?

    • coffee_tacos@mander.xyz
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      9 hours ago

      Profit (or loss) is the difference between the total revenues of a business and the total costs of a business. And although this is a somewhat simplified view of the facts, the profit in this scenario is directly representative of the amount of money people paid into premiums that was pocketed by the healthcare corporation rather than being paid out in medical coverage.

      It is impossible to be objective when it comes to ethical dilemmas (an inherently subjective matter), but let me leave you with a couple questions: How bad does a person’s actions have to be to deserve death? How many people do they have to let die for personal (or corporate) gains?

      The blame for the numerous unnecessary deaths United Healthcare played a part in can obviously not be ascribed to one person, but Brian Thompson was at least complicit in all of those deaths. He was the one with a lot of the decision-making power in all of those individual situations, and chose to strengthen a system that causes so much suffering when we have plenty of examples of a better way to handle these problems.

      • null@slrpnk.net
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        9 hours ago

        And although this is a somewhat simplified view of the facts, the profit in this scenario is directly representative of the amount of money people paid into premiums that was pocketed by the healthcare corporation rather than being paid out in medical coverage.

        I’ll give you a hint, they paid out 80% of what they took in. Whether that’s 1B or 16B, they paid out 80% of that.

        How bad does a person’s actions have to be to deserve death? How many people do they have to let die for personal (or corporate) gains?

        Certainly worse than “participation in a system that profits from people paying for healthcare”. I’m asking you to provide a morally sound justification for this specific murder.

        but Brian Thompson was at least complicit in all of those deaths

        So was the desk worker in accounting. Are you saying it’s good to murder them too?