Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So lots of people in Baltimore, including his family must have recognized his photo from the news, but nobody turned him in?
+1 random McDonald’s worker ids him but not one of his 30 cousins do?
Anonymous wrote:Tim Walz was the murdered CEO’s personal friend.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-14177405/Luigi-Mangione-Unitedhealthcare-CEO-brian-thompson-shooter-family-manifesto.html
He started yelling at the courthouse today at the cameras that someone (I couldn’t tell if he meant the cops or the news or whoever) was ‘completely out of touch' and 'insulting the intelligence of the American people'. This trial is going to be a ride. We now have footage of cops shoving Americas favorite criminal into the wall.
He needs to chill out. He's going to come across as "dangerous angry man" if he has outbursts. If he plays it cool and just flashes a few smiles, people will love him even more.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I can't believe some of you thought he was good looking. He's hideous.
He looks good in his old pics. He is way skinny now and looks rough. He has reported missing November 18th by his family so he probably hasn’t been taking care of himself well.
+1 to both of you.Anonymous wrote:A lot of speculation about his back and surgery. No one knows. We do know he is able to stand fully upright, run, rock climb, ride a bike, sit on grayhound buses for long periods of time, and sleep in a terrible hostel bed with seemingly little problem.
Yeah, he didn’t have a limp or other apparent mobility issue on the video. If he’d had a distinctive gait, it would have helped the police catch him.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:When they said he ran across Central Park I thought that made such good sense—that he had stashed a bag with change of shirt and jacket and new fake ID, and would easily be able to ditch the gun in the park and make it really hard to find. But it seems like he did none of that. If he had fresh clothes and new bag and ID, he could have stayed on that bus until Oregon and disappeared forever.
He should have used his rich pretty privilege to his advantage and threw on a Penn sweatshirt and nobody would have batted an eye at him. He probably look insane in that McDonalds
You're probably right. He's a charismatic guy; he could have blended right in, and if anyone was suspicious, easily thrown them off by laughing with them "yea, I keep getting told I look like that guy. Crazy, huh?"
No doubt he regrets that now.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:When they said he ran across Central Park I thought that made such good sense—that he had stashed a bag with change of shirt and jacket and new fake ID, and would easily be able to ditch the gun in the park and make it really hard to find. But it seems like he did none of that. If he had fresh clothes and new bag and ID, he could have stayed on that bus until Oregon and disappeared forever.
He should have used his rich pretty privilege to his advantage and threw on a Penn sweatshirt and nobody would have batted an eye at him. He probably look insane in that McDonalds
You're probably right. He's a charismatic guy; he could have blended right in, and if anyone was suspicious, easily thrown them off by laughing with them "yea, I keep getting told I look like that guy. Crazy, huh?"
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:ugh. he looks gross. nasty.
the reddit crowd still think he’s dreamy
Anonymous wrote:He’s probably got bipolar and is in a mixed state. Just watched the video and that kid is not well. Sad.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:When they said he ran across Central Park I thought that made such good sense—that he had stashed a bag with change of shirt and jacket and new fake ID, and would easily be able to ditch the gun in the park and make it really hard to find. But it seems like he did none of that. If he had fresh clothes and new bag and ID, he could have stayed on that bus until Oregon and disappeared forever.
Yes. If he'd not put down his mask, too. Plus, if he had not stopped in Altoona. You will look much weirder with a mask in Altoona than with a mask in NYC.
the mask drew attention and, paradoxically, helped identify him. after the pictures came out, he was safer without mask.
Anonymous wrote:Wonder what meds he is on - I bet there is a benzodiazepine, as prescribed, in the mix. Even though 98% of people on benzos take them as prescribed, at those doses, they can cause homocidal and sucidal ideations in a large % of folks. Many murderers often have benzos in their mix of meds.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't think people realize how many innocent people are killed by way of limiting access to affordable healthcare in this country by none other than Brian Thompson and those like him leading private health insurance companies.
This kid murdered Thompson in cold blood publicly and got caught.
That's the difference. If you saw even one insurance case of a family at their wits end trying to get a claim approved to help their loved one, I'm not sure how you would not feel that it's a kind of murder or your torture. Because these things are not put forth on a public forum enacted as a play for all to see, it's considered acceptable.
It's very much cold blooded murder however. Ask anyone who has worked a length of time in the healthcare industries.
Why are you blaming the insurer and not the hospitals and doctors for their outrageous charges? The insurance industry evolved because hospitals and doctors were just charging whatever they wanted and ordering procedures for anything and everything until just paying claims became unsustainable.
No, that's not why insurance industry evolved. Nobody can charge whatever they want because there will be someone else charging less. That's how markets work.
Insurance industry evolved because small number of people needs very expensive treatments. As a result, everyone is supposed to pay a little, and those unlucky to need these treatments can use the money. This is how insurance work in every area except US healthcare.
Here, we are paying "insurance" as a way to cover routine procedures + to gather benefits of insurance companies squeeze from hospitals through bargaining power. This dynamic, in addition to employed-based health insurance, is at the core of disfunction.