• @The_v
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    866 days ago

    He assassinated an immoral asshole who has profited on the needless pain, suffering, and death of millions.

    The reaction can’t be too surprising.

    • thermal_shock
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      5 days ago

      I’m curious about his reasoning. I hope he gets away, just curious if he was denied claims, or if a loved one was, or just sending a message. or if he’s just looking for the other half of his Boondocks Saints duo.

      • @chiliedogg
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        345 days ago

        That’s the beauty of it. Millions of people have worse lives because of this asshole, so by having an anonymous killer take him out, we all get to feel a little justice.

        • @Draces
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          245 days ago

          And thousands(?) have no lives because of this asshole. Dude killed a serial killer as far as I’m concerned

          • @chiliedogg
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            195 days ago

            The prior-authorization denial rate of United tripled under his leadership.

            I don’t like vigilante justice, but when “legitimate” paths to justice are denied, this is the inevitable result.

            A hungry crowd is an angry mob. Ignore the danger too long, and they’ll eventually feast on the flesh of those who oppress them.

      • Captain Aggravated
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        5 days ago

        The reasoning or motive are almost suspiciously clear: Thompson is was the CEO of a widely despised health insurance company under scrutiny for a lot of shady shit. The shooting happened just before 7 in the morning on a busy street in the biggest and most active city in the nation. Edit to add: In front of the hotel in which the company’s investor meeting was to take place. Left behind at the scene are bullet casings with the words “Delay” “Deny” and “Dispose” written on them which seem to allude to the company’s habit of denying medical care.

        It’s so damn obvious that I’m starting to doubt it.

        The thing that really gets me is, I can think of several other grievance killings like this; Timothy McVeigh, The Unabomber, a bunch of their ilk, folks who hurt or killed people over sociopolitical grievances. They tended to be terroristical and only managed to swat vaguely in the direction of their enemy; Timothy McVeigh for example bombed a government building killing or injuring hundreds of non-policy making government employees from a number of different agencies, and 19 children in the building’s daycare center. Kaczynski was kind of mad that the modern world had happened and mailed bombs to universities.

        Then we have this latest guy, who apparently had a beef with UnitedHealthCare, and dealt with it by assassinating the CEO with a silenced pistol. One rich asshole down, one terse yet loud and clear message delivered to the rest of his ilk, no innocent bystanders hurt.

        When’s the last time that happened in the English-speaking world?

        • @GreenKnight23
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          175 days ago

          One rich asshole down, one terse yet loud and clear message delivered to the rest of his ilk, no innocent bystanders hurt.

          This right here is the message the aristocracy doesn’t want you to hear. I can’t count the number of times this guy was referred to as a “mass shooter” in the news.

          No. He was not a “mass shooter”. Mass shooters shoot innocent civilians en masse. This guy was an assassin. One target, one goal.

          it was never about either of them.

          5mlc3z-47451610

          • @[email protected]
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            5 days ago

            No. He was not a “mass shooter”. Mass shooters shoot innocent civilians en masse. This guy was an assassin. One target, one goal.

            While I obviously agree that it can’t be described accurately as a mass shooting, I still wonder:

            Do the victims need to be innocent for it to be a mass shooting?

            From a philosophical POV there’s a issue of defining what an innocent person is (I mean some Christian societies will say that nobody’s innocent). Is innocence to be judged through the eyes of the shooter or society?

            Anyway, that wasn’t the point I set out to make, so let’s set that aside.

            Suppose one was to go to a convention of child molesters, war criminals, and nazi death camp guards, and you start shooting indiscriminately. I hope we can agree that members of the categories listed should be classified as “not innocents” by any contemporary standard. Even if only people guilty of the previously mentioned things got hit, wouldn’t it still be a mass shooting once a certain number had been shot?

        • Dragon Rider (drag)
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          95 days ago

          Fairy tales do not tell children that monsters exist. Children already know that monsters exist. Fairy tales tell children that monsters can be killed.

        • GladiusB
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          45 days ago

          History is full of these. But we somehow think we are better than our pasts. And the rich are counting on us being the ethical ones.

          People are starting to realize that is a huge miscalculation.