Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I suspect the apologist for the insurance industry who's been posting in this thread all day in fact is an employed wonk with the insurance industry. LOL.
Agree.
Anonymous wrote:I suspect the apologist for the insurance industry who's been posting in this thread all day in fact is an employed wonk with the insurance industry. LOL.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If he was upset about his mother’s treatment, why did he cut off contact leaving her to file a missing person report?
People are asking all these questions like he’s a sane rational actor. He is not. It is very sad. Everyone is talking about it because it happened to be UHC that his paranoia focused on. It could have been someone at his surf coop, or the head of his former employer, or a piliitican. But it obviously says something about where Americans are with healthcare that they are building this Robin Hood narrative around him.
Agree.
The biases are rampant.
#1 thing when dealing with a mentally ill person is not to assume normal, rationale motives. Or sometimes any motive.
Wait for the “voices told me to do it” defense.
Since when did murder = mental illness? Humans have been killing each other without being mentally-ill since Cain killed Able. If you're Christian, then you believe that in God's eye, there is no valid reason for murder. But that doesn't mean that people can't have internally rational motives for murder. Luigi's reasons are internally consistent: mental illness is not needed to explain them.
Luigi had no authority to be judge and executioner.
But the insurance companies do?
Health care isn’t a right. It’s cost money and is an expense. Insurance is a means to pay. But they don’t cover anything and everything on everyone. If there is treatment or med you think you need and they won’t pay, you are welcome to find another means to pay for it.
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.
You and many others really don’t get how complex the health system works. Someone told you no and you decided it was their fault.
This economist explains it better than I can.
https://www.noahpinion.blog/p/insurance-companies-arent-the-main
People here don’t know how 20% down payments on a $900,000 property work either.
His parents have a real estate empire. They gave him this property, likely one they owned, as a gift. They didn't give it as "here's a property with 200k equity, the mortgage payments start June 1st. You're welcome." It's safe to assume he owned the place outright to do what he wanted to with it. It sold for 900k so he pocketed whatever 900 minus transaction fees were. Let's be totally outrageous and say those were 200k, he left with 700k and that was his funding. He's from a wealthy family in real estate, this is not an unusual gift for a 20 something kid from their parents.
Some local multi family homes in Baltimore = a real estate empire?!?
Gawd.
Glad you never met any intl students at college who really did own family empires.
Owing 2 golf course resorts, a radio station, and a dozen nursing homes is a bit more than "local multi family homes"
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I suspect the apologist for the insurance industry who's been posting in this thread all day in fact is an employed wonk with the insurance industry. LOL.
You want them to get shot too, che?
Not PP but why is it that whenever you get called out, you always fall back to calling people communists? Again, the people upset with the system come from both parties. And that seems to really make people like you squirm.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If he was upset about his mother’s treatment, why did he cut off contact leaving her to file a missing person report?
People are asking all these questions like he’s a sane rational actor. He is not. It is very sad. Everyone is talking about it because it happened to be UHC that his paranoia focused on. It could have been someone at his surf coop, or the head of his former employer, or a piliitican. But it obviously says something about where Americans are with healthcare that they are building this Robin Hood narrative around him.
Agree.
The biases are rampant.
#1 thing when dealing with a mentally ill person is not to assume normal, rationale motives. Or sometimes any motive.
Wait for the “voices told me to do it” defense.
Since when did murder = mental illness? Humans have been killing each other without being mentally-ill since Cain killed Able. If you're Christian, then you believe that in God's eye, there is no valid reason for murder. But that doesn't mean that people can't have internally rational motives for murder. Luigi's reasons are internally consistent: mental illness is not needed to explain them.
Luigi had no authority to be judge and executioner.
But the insurance companies do?
Health care isn’t a right. It’s cost money and is an expense. Insurance is a means to pay. But they don’t cover anything and everything on everyone. If there is treatment or med you think you need and they won’t pay, you are welcome to find another means to pay for it.
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.
You and many others really don’t get how complex the health system works. Someone told you no and you decided it was their fault.
This economist explains it better than I can.
https://www.noahpinion.blog/p/insurance-companies-arent-the-main
People here don’t know how 20% down payments on a $900,000 property work either.
His parents have a real estate empire. They gave him this property, likely one they owned, as a gift. They didn't give it as "here's a property with 200k equity, the mortgage payments start June 1st. You're welcome." It's safe to assume he owned the place outright to do what he wanted to with it. It sold for 900k so he pocketed whatever 900 minus transaction fees were. Let's be totally outrageous and say those were 200k, he left with 700k and that was his funding. He's from a wealthy family in real estate, this is not an unusual gift for a 20 something kid from their parents.
How do we know they gifted it to him? I haven’t seen that posted anywhere. Yes they sold their home but nothing about where the proceeds went
Anonymous wrote:Hey y’all if you don’t like corporate health insurance, there’s always Kaiser.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If he was upset about his mother’s treatment, why did he cut off contact leaving her to file a missing person report?
People are asking all these questions like he’s a sane rational actor. He is not. It is very sad. Everyone is talking about it because it happened to be UHC that his paranoia focused on. It could have been someone at his surf coop, or the head of his former employer, or a piliitican. But it obviously says something about where Americans are with healthcare that they are building this Robin Hood narrative around him.
Agree.
The biases are rampant.
#1 thing when dealing with a mentally ill person is not to assume normal, rationale motives. Or sometimes any motive.
Wait for the “voices told me to do it” defense.
Since when did murder = mental illness? Humans have been killing each other without being mentally-ill since Cain killed Able. If you're Christian, then you believe that in God's eye, there is no valid reason for murder. But that doesn't mean that people can't have internally rational motives for murder. Luigi's reasons are internally consistent: mental illness is not needed to explain them.
Luigi had no authority to be judge and executioner.
But the insurance companies do?
Health care isn’t a right. It’s cost money and is an expense. Insurance is a means to pay. But they don’t cover anything and everything on everyone. If there is treatment or med you think you need and they won’t pay, you are welcome to find another means to pay for it.
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.
You and many others really don’t get how complex the health system works. Someone told you no and you decided it was their fault.
This economist explains it better than I can.
https://www.noahpinion.blog/p/insurance-companies-arent-the-main
People here don’t know how 20% down payments on a $900,000 property work either.
His parents have a real estate empire. They gave him this property, likely one they owned, as a gift. They didn't give it as "here's a property with 200k equity, the mortgage payments start June 1st. You're welcome." It's safe to assume he owned the place outright to do what he wanted to with it. It sold for 900k so he pocketed whatever 900 minus transaction fees were. Let's be totally outrageous and say those were 200k, he left with 700k and that was his funding. He's from a wealthy family in real estate, this is not an unusual gift for a 20 something kid from their parents.
Some local multi family homes in Baltimore = a real estate empire?!?
Gawd.
Glad you never met any intl students at college who really did own family empires.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If he was upset about his mother’s treatment, why did he cut off contact leaving her to file a missing person report?
People are asking all these questions like he’s a sane rational actor. He is not. It is very sad. Everyone is talking about it because it happened to be UHC that his paranoia focused on. It could have been someone at his surf coop, or the head of his former employer, or a piliitican. But it obviously says something about where Americans are with healthcare that they are building this Robin Hood narrative around him.
Agree.
The biases are rampant.
#1 thing when dealing with a mentally ill person is not to assume normal, rationale motives. Or sometimes any motive.
Wait for the “voices told me to do it” defense.
Since when did murder = mental illness? Humans have been killing each other without being mentally-ill since Cain killed Able. If you're Christian, then you believe that in God's eye, there is no valid reason for murder. But that doesn't mean that people can't have internally rational motives for murder. Luigi's reasons are internally consistent: mental illness is not needed to explain them.
Luigi had no authority to be judge and executioner.
But the insurance companies do?
Health care isn’t a right. It’s cost money and is an expense. Insurance is a means to pay. But they don’t cover anything and everything on everyone. If there is treatment or med you think you need and they won’t pay, you are welcome to find another means to pay for it.
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.
You and many others really don’t get how complex the health system works. Someone told you no and you decided it was their fault.
This economist explains it better than I can.
https://www.noahpinion.blog/p/insurance-companies-arent-the-main
People here don’t know how 20% down payments on a $900,000 property work either.
His parents have a real estate empire. They gave him this property, likely one they owned, as a gift. They didn't give it as "here's a property with 200k equity, the mortgage payments start June 1st. You're welcome." It's safe to assume he owned the place outright to do what he wanted to with it. It sold for 900k so he pocketed whatever 900 minus transaction fees were. Let's be totally outrageous and say those were 200k, he left with 700k and that was his funding. He's from a wealthy family in real estate, this is not an unusual gift for a 20 something kid from their parents.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I suspect the apologist for the insurance industry who's been posting in this thread all day in fact is an employed wonk with the insurance industry. LOL.
You want them to get shot too, che?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why is anyone the target?!
But what about the the unaffordable cost of health care and claims that get denied?
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
Sure, UHC is doing us all a favor by charging us ever increasing premiums and then refusing to pay out.
If this is the best talking point the insurance industry can ciome up with, no wonder their share prices are getting decimated.
See how much you’d be paying without insurance involved. All you people seem to think that $20K is a reasonable cost for a broken leg in the ER and insurance should just pay it are the problem. We are a nation of spoiled, poorly educated children.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: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/
Wouldn't surprise me if the McDonald's tip thing is fake and they actually quickly found out who he was via some creepy cyber Patriot Act / NSA / Palantir method and nabbed him when he logged onto the wi-fi via device(s) they were tracking. Who freakin' knows!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If he was upset about his mother’s treatment, why did he cut off contact leaving her to file a missing person report?
People are asking all these questions like he’s a sane rational actor. He is not. It is very sad. Everyone is talking about it because it happened to be UHC that his paranoia focused on. It could have been someone at his surf coop, or the head of his former employer, or a piliitican. But it obviously says something about where Americans are with healthcare that they are building this Robin Hood narrative around him.
Agree.
The biases are rampant.
#1 thing when dealing with a mentally ill person is not to assume normal, rationale motives. Or sometimes any motive.
Wait for the “voices told me to do it” defense.
Since when did murder = mental illness? Humans have been killing each other without being mentally-ill since Cain killed Able. If you're Christian, then you believe that in God's eye, there is no valid reason for murder. But that doesn't mean that people can't have internally rational motives for murder. Luigi's reasons are internally consistent: mental illness is not needed to explain them.
Luigi had no authority to be judge and executioner.
But the insurance companies do?
Health care isn’t a right. It’s cost money and is an expense. Insurance is a means to pay. But they don’t cover anything and everything on everyone. If there is treatment or med you think you need and they won’t pay, you are welcome to find another means to pay for it.
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.
You and many others really don’t get how complex the health system works. Someone told you no and you decided it was their fault.
This economist explains it better than I can.
https://www.noahpinion.blog/p/insurance-companies-arent-the-main
If the insurers aren't overcharging then they can stop lying about what coverage they provide.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If he was upset about his mother’s treatment, why did he cut off contact leaving her to file a missing person report?
People are asking all these questions like he’s a sane rational actor. He is not. It is very sad. Everyone is talking about it because it happened to be UHC that his paranoia focused on. It could have been someone at his surf coop, or the head of his former employer, or a piliitican. But it obviously says something about where Americans are with healthcare that they are building this Robin Hood narrative around him.
Agree.
The biases are rampant.
#1 thing when dealing with a mentally ill person is not to assume normal, rationale motives. Or sometimes any motive.
Wait for the “voices told me to do it” defense.
Since when did murder = mental illness? Humans have been killing each other without being mentally-ill since Cain killed Able. If you're Christian, then you believe that in God's eye, there is no valid reason for murder. But that doesn't mean that people can't have internally rational motives for murder. Luigi's reasons are internally consistent: mental illness is not needed to explain them.
Luigi had no authority to be judge and executioner.
But the insurance companies do?
Health care isn’t a right. It’s cost money and is an expense. Insurance is a means to pay. But they don’t cover anything and everything on everyone. If there is treatment or med you think you need and they won’t pay, you are welcome to find another means to pay for it.
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.
You and many others really don’t get how complex the health system works. Someone told you no and you decided it was their fault.
This economist explains it better than I can.
https://www.noahpinion.blog/p/insurance-companies-arent-the-main
People here don’t know how 20% down payments on a $900,000 property work either.
His parents have a real estate empire. They gave him this property, likely one they owned, as a gift. They didn't give it as "here's a property with 200k equity, the mortgage payments start June 1st. You're welcome." It's safe to assume he owned the place outright to do what he wanted to with it. It sold for 900k so he pocketed whatever 900 minus transaction fees were. Let's be totally outrageous and say those were 200k, he left with 700k and that was his funding. He's from a wealthy family in real estate, this is not an unusual gift for a 20 something kid from their parents.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If he was upset about his mother’s treatment, why did he cut off contact leaving her to file a missing person report?
People are asking all these questions like he’s a sane rational actor. He is not. It is very sad. Everyone is talking about it because it happened to be UHC that his paranoia focused on. It could have been someone at his surf coop, or the head of his former employer, or a piliitican. But it obviously says something about where Americans are with healthcare that they are building this Robin Hood narrative around him.
Agree.
The biases are rampant.
#1 thing when dealing with a mentally ill person is not to assume normal, rationale motives. Or sometimes any motive.
Wait for the “voices told me to do it” defense.
Since when did murder = mental illness? Humans have been killing each other without being mentally-ill since Cain killed Able. If you're Christian, then you believe that in God's eye, there is no valid reason for murder. But that doesn't mean that people can't have internally rational motives for murder. Luigi's reasons are internally consistent: mental illness is not needed to explain them.
Luigi had no authority to be judge and executioner.
But the insurance companies do?
Health care isn’t a right. It’s cost money and is an expense. Insurance is a means to pay. But they don’t cover anything and everything on everyone. If there is treatment or med you think you need and they won’t pay, you are welcome to find another means to pay for it.
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.
You and many others really don’t get how complex the health system works. Someone told you no and you decided it was their fault.
This economist explains it better than I can.
https://www.noahpinion.blog/p/insurance-companies-arent-the-main
People here don’t know how 20% down payments on a $900,000 property work either.
His parents have a real estate empire. They gave him this property, likely one they owned, as a gift. They didn't give it as "here's a property with 200k equity, the mortgage payments start June 1st. You're welcome." It's safe to assume he owned the place outright to do what he wanted to with it. It sold for 900k so he pocketed whatever 900 minus transaction fees were. Let's be totally outrageous and say those were 200k, he left with 700k and that was his funding. He's from a wealthy family in real estate, this is not an unusual gift for a 20 something kid from their parents.