Americans' fury at the health insurance industry has continued to build in the wake of UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson's murder in New York City last week.NBC News reported Wednesday that many Americans have become increasingly angry over health insurers' denials of claims for doctor-prescribed ...
Americans' fury at the health insurance industry has continued to build in the wake of UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson's murder in New York City last week.
It's more than just denied claims. It's about the entirety of society being turned into a squid game which shits on everyone who's actually trying to work together instead of competing with each other.
This! We are told that the best way forward is constantly fighting against each other. That works to make the rich richer, but virtually everyone would have a better life if we just didn't do it.
Forget about denied claims. I'm paying more in healthcare premiums than the tax would be for better coverage... All so middlemen can get paid millions to make everything about it worse
Well that's the problem... we're not collectively paying for anything. We're in a bunch of small groups paying significantly more than we need to be. There's way more overhead running separate insurance companies AND each company gets a worse deal on drugs because they're buying less.
Those two things are how I've swayed several conservatives into supporting universal healthcare...you have to make it about the money. Most don't realize they're already subsidizing the poor and sick with their premiums and that better coverage for everyone would cost less if it was centralized. They don't care that the lower class struggles...but they might care that it makes economic sense to collectively bargain.
You had the chance with Bernie Sanders, but you blew it. Removing profit motive from healthcare is the only long term solution, which every single other established country have already done.
The rage was going to go somewhere. Bill Burr isn’t my humor but he’s said the most normal, in line with human behavior things thus far in regards to this occurrence. His analogy between old school mobsters and current corporations is solid too.
I guess now we just wait for the social contagion, which will likely happen unless the financial squeeze of the masses eases up.