Loud terminally online minority [they] cheer claiming literally everyone with health insurance hates and has been personally hurt by the CEO.
They state he's a hero and trained hitman who will never get caught
They think everyone with any information will never tip off the authorities because of course this killing would be seen as justified just like they do.
Suspect apprehended within days <--- we are here
They find every little positive thing about the suspect and ignore all negatives to make him an idol
They falsely claim that he somehow the public will rise up and force the DA to drop the case
Suspect is charged with murder
They think they can secretly pack the court to nullify his case when it comes to trial
They 'plan' to stage the largest protest ever seen outside the courthouse
The trial comes and the court is not stacked and there is no protests.
Suspect is found guilty.
They falsely claim the jury was bought for
Suspect rots in prison and fades into obscurity
They move onto the next thing that gives them a false sense of meaning.
Couldn't agree more. Reddit is legit dangerous at this point. So much manipulation. I thought it would cool off once trump won, but they've doubled down
"Suspect rots in prison and fades into obscurity."
The whole this is so senseless. I will be interested to hear what provoked this guy to do this. Mental health issues? A feeling of being "wronged" by "Big Insurance?" Attention?
Nah it seems pretty cut and dry that it was a murder. The dude had a mask, stepped out as the CEO walked past him and shot him in the back multiple times and ran away. So he'll go to prison for a very long time.
But all the people complaining about insurance, look at United Health Group's profit margin, it's an average of 5% recently. Meaning if they were a non-profit they would only be able to drop prices or increase coverage by 5%... The problem isn't insurance companies, that's a small part. The problem is why medical care costs so much. Why are hospitals charging thousands of dollars for very small things. You've got people in the US going to other countries and paying cash without insurance or funding from that other country because procedures are way cheaper in other countries.
Nah it seems pretty cut and dry that it was a murder. The dude had a mask, stepped out as the CEO walked past him and shot him in the back multiple times and ran away. So he'll go to prison for a very long time.
But all the people complaining about insurance, look at United Health Group's profit margin, it's an average of 5% recently. Meaning if they were a non-profit they would only be able to drop prices or increase coverage by 5%... The problem isn't insurance companies, that's a small part. The problem is why medical care costs so much. Why are hospitals charging thousands of dollars for very small things. You've got people in the US going to other countries and paying cash without insurance or funding from that other country because procedures are way cheaper in other countries.
You're way wrong about the problem not being the Insurance Companies - they add approximately 25-30% of overall medical costs, many of which are passed on to consumers. Insurance companies make a profit by collecting then investing premiums and denying claims. If you are a medical provider, you have to submit your claims and hope you don't run into any number of contractual or technical reasons for a denial, while being on top of your denial appeals or risk having to write off the claims. Every denied claim that you lose payment on means that you have to increase the prices of your services to ensure you make some of that money back from the claims that do get paid (and most of them have a contractually agreed upon limit, e.g. an MRI that costs $3K has a max payment of $1600 and that is what the InsCo pays). You also have capitation agreements that guarantee a flat payment at a set interval, and once insured services have been rendered up to that limit, any additional services cannot be submitted for payment.
If you want to know how much insurance companies drive up the cost of services, just ask your medical provider what the cash out of pocket discount for a service is - very often, it will be the same 25-30% the insurance companies contribute to the cost of that service.