great question |
more leftist speculation. lame. |
Indoctrination is indoctrination. We live in Baltimore, that was a conservative successful community. He came from that. Lived in a vastly different environment (shout out to everyone with college kids now or the last 6 years - it's been nuts), and worked in a vastly different environment. Luigi came in malleable and became a product of his Upenn, SF and Hawaii group home environment and lifestyle, as well as his online environment. |
Became malleable how? The things he says about the insurance industry are widely shared and not part of any indoctrination and are not particularly radical. Now, the murderous part is. |
Where was the 900k house? Also, when did he turn 26? Can we assume he was dropped from his parent's insurance on his last bday? |
DP. Two points: 1. It's not whether *I* think it's medically necessary. It's whether my medical team thinks it's necessary, with appropriate documentation and review. 2. Insurance is risk management. If the insurer can just decide not to pay, you are proposing a model in which the insurer has no risk whatsoever. That's ludicrous. |
I think it was in the Bay Area where he was living for his job with True Car as a data analyst. I'm guessing he went on his employers insurance for that time anyway? I guess its possible he kept his parents insurance even if he had access to work insurance. It seems like it all went sideways when he left True Car and the Bay Area, sold the house, and moved to Hawaii to live in a surfing commune. |
https://x.com/tomselliott/status/1866213151014052208 |
I mean, it can be a right if we as a nation decide it is. That's how rights work. No, insurance policies don't cover everything. And also many insurers renege on covering what they claim to cover. Both of these things can be true at the same time. Do you actually not understand this? But keep telling yourself how insurance companies are the good guys, and only demanding, unreasonable, stupid patients get their claims denied. Maybe that will work out for you. |
Ahhh, so he was half indoctrinated, half not. Got it. Good job explaing how the indoctrinated pick and choose and think about binary outcomes. |
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This 100%. Plus all the expenses for the kids who have issues due to stressful childhoods and unreasonably societal expectations.
“People except too much. Sorry, but they do. As a population we are over treated and over medicated. It’s not sustainable. I’m 40 and I honestly can’t think of a single female friend that isn’t on an SSRI, anti anxiety, or stimulant med. 75% of the population had eaten their way into diabetes, being overweight or obesity. Now we need an expensive drug to fix it because no one wants to eat less. Women want to wait to have kids into their mid 30s and 40s use IVF. People used to have kids in their 20s or just accept kids weren’t in the cards if it didn’t happen naturally. Not anymore. I don’t think our problem is healthcare, it’s our expectations. People want to live until 100 and have every single aliment and discomfort alleviated. Getting sick and dying is part of life. Curing and fixing everything on everyone, every time, at all ages (or using up tons of resources trying) is not sustainable..” |
As long as there are nutjobs out there accolading murderers and speculating that they must have murdered because XYZ, you're not going to get anywhere. Stop digging in to nonsense and maybe you will. But that's not taught at UPenn anymore (civil discourse, debates, empathy, etc. ). Just my way or the highway. Boom. |
Does than tin hat still work in all this rain today? |
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How ironic. Even the $60,000 reward offer might get denied!
https://nypost.com/2024/12/11/us-news/who-gets-the-60k-reward-in-search-for-unitedhealthcare-ceos-killer/ |