A grainy image of his face drew comparisons to Hollywood heartthrobs. A jacket similar to the one he’s wearing on wanted posters is reportedly flying off the shelves. And the words written on the bullets he used to kill a man in cold blood on a sidewalk on Wednesday have become, for some people, a rallying cry.

Four days after a gunman assassinated a top health insurance executive in Midtown Manhattan and vanished, the unidentified suspect has, in some quarters, been venerated as something approaching a folk hero.

  • @TheDemonBuer
    link
    41
    edit-2
    10 days ago

    “It’s being framed as some opening blow in a broader class war…"

    That’s what many of us are hoping for. But this author, and nearly all other mainstream news outlets can’t understand that. They can’t understand why we would want a class war, why would we want something so disruptive, so destabilizing, so potentially destructive? It baffles and disturbs them, but that’s because they can’t, or won’t, see the harm being done by the current system. They are blind to the harms of late capitalism, willfully.

    For many of us, the problems go much deeper than a few greedy and unethical CEOs, it’s the system. The inhumanity of health insurance providers is just a very egregious and obvious tip of the iceberg. This CEO wasn’t just some exceptionally bad guy, he was a product of the system. He’ll be replaced by another one of thousands and thousands of people who come out of our business or economic schools, and who would have run United Healthcare the same way he did. The problem is a system in which the private profits of a relative few are prioritized over all else; over human well being, and over sustainability and environmental protection. Many of us believe that that system must be abolished and replaced. We don’t want war, but if war is what’s necessary to destroy this unsustainable and inhumane system, then so be it.