• @Womdat10
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        477 months ago

        I mean your right, but that doesn’t have much to do with this post.

          • @Burninator05
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            577 months ago

            Per your linked article there was a 79% chance that they would stay married. Divorce is more likely when the wife gets sick then the husband but I wouldn’t have define her chances of being alone the way you did.

            • @[email protected]
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              -57 months ago

              Imagine conflating staying married with staying around. They have the will to leave but not stomach for divorce.

          • @[email protected]
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            7 months ago

            Aw, man. I didn’t wanna feel this way first thing in the morning.

            Some years ago, I was in this weird social circle, owing to my partner at the time.
            She was longtime friends with a guy who has his own interesting story, but the relevant part here is that he’s heavily involved in college-aged veteran’s lives. (Mentoring, life guidance, helping people transition back.)
            During a get-together put on by him, my partner and I met this young couple. They were basically the model of a young, “trad”, Christian couple. Ben had Boy Scout/youth pastor vibes about him, and Sarah was super funny, kind and never seemed to forget personal details. Both were great to talk to, with broad knowledge and experience. He was a bit more Christian oriented, and a bit more conservative, but was earnest and it wasn’t really a thing that came up unless others pressed.
            They seemed incredibly happy together, and about a year later, he proposed. A few months later they married. Less than a month after that they were out celebrating Sarah’s pregnancy, a giant SUV ran a stop sign while speeding, and Sarah was so injured she wound up in a coma, but still pregnant, until after their child was born.
            She stayed in a coma for a few months after the birth, coming out of it permanently different. They didn’t really go out to events anymore. She was mostly in a wheelchair and didn’t talk. I kept up via social media until I stopped seeing posts from him. He mostly had posted about the challenges of raising their kid alone while also taking care of her, with an occasional news story about the accident/fallout from it.
            About 6 months after I’d last seen something, I sought out his socials for an update, to find he’d scrubbed it of Sarah. He’d made new posts the algorithm didn’t show me - his and Sarah’s kid, with a new woman. Sarah’s socials had one update, posted by her mother. She now lived with her mom, and was okay. They were just taking things day by day. That was 7ish years ago?

            I guess I don’t condemn someone in their early 20’s for bailing, I suppose, but that situation makes me sad because of how terrible it is for all parties.

      • Rusty Shackleford
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        117 months ago

        Conversely, a matriarchy doesn’t automatically imply a more moral and meritocratic society.

        Women are just people and subject to the same human flaws as men are, especially in matters of resources, power, and influence.

    • @militaryintelligence
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      -1247 months ago

      Fuck that narrative. This guy is just a psychopath who was inconvenienced, not overwhelmed because of caring for his wife.

      • @taanegl
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        7 months ago

        “Inconvenienced”?

        Oh I’m sorry. Taking care of someone for the rest of their lives, not being able to, not having the means to and all the while suffering for it is something you think is a walk in the fucking park?

        I think the key word here is “suffer”. Americans worship suffering. It gives them a hard on. So when someone wants to end the suffering, that’s an insult. Typical ugly American mentality, devoid of any understanding for human nature and full of piss and vinegar. Also, it’s unrealistic and kind of naive, because I bet this happens more often than you think - but it’s hard to actually figure out. Why? Let me count the ways.

        You have a judicial system committing mass judicial murder on a weekly basis “because you can’t afford the fight the case”, a for profit health sector that would pull plugs in concert if an insurance company told them to, doctors and surgeons dodging malpractice suits on a cross-state basis like it’s a sport and you’re probably happy knowing he’ll be sent to a for profit prison system that makes profits in the billions, where he’ll become a slave for the state to “pay back his debt to society”.

        But sure, means and needs were not the issue. He should have pulled himself up by his bootstraps and gotten that 4th job.

        • @[email protected]
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          -17 months ago

          So when someone wants to end the suffering

          You’re not referring to her, right? Cause she didn’t want to die. She told him that when he first tried to kill her.

          • @taanegl
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            87 months ago

            No, I wasn’t referring to her. FFS. Like I understand why you would say that, because him considering his own suffering is just too selfish to be taken into consideration when asking why he did it, and us considering it as a part of his decision making process or that laws and systemic issues line this shit up like bowling pins? Noo! That’s not allowed when considering motive… he’s just EVIL which is a scientific term and influenced by SATAN because he DIDNT VOTE REPUBLICAN and probably LIVED AMONGST IMMIGRANTS /s

            Like seriously, Americans are fucking stupid sometimes.

            • @[email protected]
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              7 months ago

              Nah, usually the “wants to end the suffering” is referring to a suffering person dying or being killed, especially when an extremely sick person died in the event being described. Sometimes it’s used to reference just drugging yourself up beyond safe limits to remove chronic pain, generally also a very sick person. It’s pretty much never used to refer to killing someone else to free yourself from debilitating financial obligations. This isn’t an American thing, this is a poor word choice thing.

              He is evil. He may have been suffering as well due to the evil system we live in and wouldn’t be in a humane system, but he could have just walked away or declared bankruptcy or divorced her or killed himself. All of those things are still harmful to her, but they’re better than being murdered. Whatever his hurts were, she didn’t deserve that. A bad circumstance doesn’t mean you can murder an innocent person you vowed to love and support and not be a bad person.

            • @[email protected]
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              17 months ago

              The 1% are using every possible method to dumb down our population. Be grateful it’s not happening in your country yet.

            • @[email protected]
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              -17 months ago

              Having lived in America for all my life, what I can say is that most Americans are way more reasonable, kind, logical, and empathetic than you. But that’s really faint praise. You probably hate Americans so much because you see yourself in them so much.

        • @[email protected]
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          -77 months ago

          This isn’t limited to Americans or the US. The reason you are describing this in such tone is American exceptionalism, though, because I can just feel the indignation at this happening in the country you subconsciously expect to be exceptional.

            • @[email protected]
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              07 months ago

              As certain kind of people say when talking about weapons, “that’s why we don’t have free healthcare, bitch”.

              In other words, those western democracies have huge taxes and small militaries.

              (I personally think that with some reduction of MIC-related corruption USA could have both good social nets and defense, but that’s the reality.)

              • @[email protected]
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                47 months ago

                We’ll ignore the fact that America pays as much per capita towards Medicare and MedicAid as Canada pays for its admittedly flawed universal healthcare and instead focus on the question. You think it’s better to spend more than the next 5(I think) countries on the military but also disagree with raising taxes even an iota to improve Healthcare coverage?

        • @[email protected]
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          -287 months ago

          Fuck that.

          Most of us aren’t trying to kill our spouses because it gets too hard.

          Evil people may face systemic issues like the rest of us, but that doesn’t mean we excuse their behavior.

          • @taanegl
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            227 months ago

            “Evil” is a social construct for people in the dark ages, because it holds as much merit as believing in fairies.

            Again, you are really in denial of human nature, and as such don’t know that the conditions I mentioned set the stage for this kind of thing to happen.

            Do you know that you can be corrupted, that you can commit murder, if the conditions are right?

                • @[email protected]
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                  187 months ago

                  This man’s wife specifically asked him not to, because he also tried to kill her last year. I was expecting to have more sympathy for the man, but then I read the story. His kid brought him in to confess, which is an unbelievable position to put your kid in.

                  I do understand putting someone out of their misery, and I’m not unempathetic towards the grinding horror that is capitalism, but this is an awful thing for other reasons as well.

              • @StupidBrotherInLaw
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                77 months ago

                My wife and I have discussed a few. For her, anything that’s terminal or results in such a significant decrease in quality of life that continued living is some degree of torture more than 50% of the time.

                My criteria are mostly the same, with added conditions for dementia, which seems to run in the family.

              • @taanegl
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                7 months ago

                Bro… I just listed the reasons… like if you don’t want to understand human nature, human psychology, sociology or why systemic issues are apart of creating the conditions that would allow this to happen, then that’s your dumbass problem.

                Like seriously. Read a fucking book - and not the Abrahamic ones. Those rot your brain.

      • @[email protected]
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        427 months ago

        Capitalism isn’t exploitative, it’s just an inconvenience? Oh, well that solves everything!

        Wait, no, that’s actually incomprehensibly moronic. F*** your defense of such an evil and exploitative system.

      • Flying Squid
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        367 months ago

        I’m seriously ill. Nowhere near as ill as his wife was, but ill enough to not be working and to have gone to the Mayo Clinic. I’m fully aware of what a huge, overwhelming burden I’ve been to my family in terms of both finances and emotional toll.

        Do I condone what this person did? Absolutely not. But dealing with a seriously ill person is a hell of a lot more than an inconvenience. I do everything I can to make my wife and daughter’s lives as easy as possible despite my issues, but I can only do so much. There have been a lot of very difficult moments for all of us.

      • @[email protected]
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        237 months ago

        This guy is just a psychopath who was inconvenienced, not overwhelmed because of caring for his wife.

        Where is the line exactly? What constitutes an inconvenience and what is worthy of being overwhelming.

        • @meco03211
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          247 months ago

          Especially weighed against the capabilities of the person being inconvenienced or overwhelmed. If they have a hard enough time taking care of themselves, adding another person could be a death sentence for both.

  • @[email protected]
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    7 months ago

    This is one of the possible results when medicine and hospital care is run but cutthroat corporations. All healthcare should be required, by law, to be non profit.

    • @PriorityMotif
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      407 months ago

      Most of these hospitals are non-profit. They just funnel all the money into for profit companies and management salaries.

        • @HeyThisIsntTheYMCA
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          57 months ago

          I ran the books for a law firm for I don’t know how many years. They had a profit larger than $500 one year, and that was by choice. We put all the profits in salaries every year. For smaller businesses it’s pretty easy. Larger companies it’s harder but doable, you just have to be right on top of your bookkeeping.

          • @[email protected]
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            57 months ago

            There’s no issue with this because it gets taxed either way… all of the employees pay tax on the additional income probably at about the same rate as the company would have.

            For a hospital on the other hand, they’re just increasing costs of Healthcare.

    • @[email protected]
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      127 months ago

      I work for a nonprofit Healthcare system, unfortunately the companies we buy our materials from are definitely for profit, as are the insurance companies that do their damnest to not spend their money.

      It’s a rotton system.

  • @[email protected]
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    7 months ago

    Fuck this dystopian bullshit and everything that led up to it. Our healthcare system is fucking barbaric.

    • @Coreidan
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      547 months ago

      Ya but at least the rich people get to float around on their yachts right???

      😭

        • @ExfilBravo
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          107 months ago

          Social media is making the people that should be fighting the rich love them instead.

      • @lennybird
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        77 months ago

        Someone recently memed a twitter post that said, “The Have-Nots and the Have-Yachts.”

        These right-wing assholes bitch and bemoan injustice and the working man and elite, but ignore how fucked it is we have rising childhood homelessness let alone poverty… But hey at least wealthy shitheads own multiple mansions, yachts, and private planes amirite. The King of Jordan owns at least 2 beach front Malibu mansions; Saudi Arabia, Russia, Japan, China own vast swaths of American land… And there’s not a peep over that; just blame the poor mother and child fleeing crime and poverty in South/Central America for geopolitical disasters WE largely caused or ignored in the first place.

    • @[email protected]
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      -17 months ago

      If it makes you feel any better

      Canada is trying to adopt your system because public health care is so much worse. Only ~35% oppose private healthcare

  • @eatthecake
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    7 months ago

    How is this not first degree murder? He admitted to trying to kill her before and depression is not a defence for murder.

    • @[email protected]
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      327 months ago

      I guess they don’t think it would stick. In Missouri, murder in the first degree is “if he or she knowingly causes the death of another person after deliberation upon the matter”. The defense would probably argue that in this instance, he did not deliberate, but took advantage of a brief opportunity.

      I don’t know how true that is, but it seems like a likely argument.

      • @eatthecake
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        197 months ago

        Except he admitted to having deliberated on it and tried it before, he had also planned it on a third occasion. This could not have been more premeditated.

    • @[email protected]
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      87 months ago

      Yeah, this doesn’t feel like it could be more premeditated. He tried it multiple times.

  • @Etterra
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    387 months ago

    This Silent Hill 2 reboot sounds horrible.

    • @Fedizen
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      37 months ago

      I’m just imagining the “this is fine” dog on a yacht in a sea of corpses

  • @Fedizen
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    137 months ago

    “Doesn’t look like anything to me” -corporate america

  • @AnUnusualRelic
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    97 months ago

    It’s also a neat trick to save on rent. That’s pretty clever.

  • @Shadowq8
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    17 months ago

    Like he couldn’t divorce her ?

  • @ParabolicMotion
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    -277 months ago

    Have they done any investigation into the cause of her illness? I have no sympathy for this man. If anything, I would be questioning the cause of her illness after hearing that he attempted to kill her multiple times. There are a lot of toxins that can damage a person’s kidneys. I didn’t trust eating my husband’s cooking after he announced that he would rather have a mail order bride from Eastern Europe, or Russia, instead of me. I guess only the blood bank would know if he ever did anything to me. That one time I was seriously ill, vomiting, with diarrhea, and it only lasted one day, I had to question his motive for demanding to make dinner the night before that.

      • @StupidBrotherInLaw
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        397 months ago

        Just FYI, this person is likely suffering from schizophrenia. Not just because of this comment, but dozens of comments about the many, many people that have tried to kill them in a variety of ways, some nonsensical, since their childhood, not to mention their “law enforcement ex boyfriend that causes planes to fly low over their home”.

          • @[email protected]
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            77 months ago

            Huh. That’s interesting —

            I’ve heard that severely schizophrenic people don’t know they are schizophrenic.
            It’s not fair or right to characterize LLMs with human medical issues. (Not for humans, that is.) But similar to humans in that situation, LLM’s don’t “know” they are speaking nonsense.

            Wonder if it would be possible to have clusters of LLMs that “talk to” each other to establish baselines.

            (Sorry, I just say whatever pops into my head. I know this comment isn’t contextually relevant.)

      • @ParabolicMotion
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        -77 months ago

        I filed for divorce twice, but each time, he would disappear right before the last court ruling to finalize it. The judge threw out my last attempt at divorce because he wouldn’t show up. He showed up to divide assets because he wanted one of the cars in his name. He ditched out on the last court date and now we’re still legally married. We have been separated for almost seven years now. I’m still not free from him, though. He has had his friends using his license and email accounts to terrorize me. I don’t know where he is now. All I can figure is that he found that mail order bride of his dreams and swapped ID’s with one of his single friends to have a chance with her. That, or he got into a fight while drunk, again, and some guy beat him to death. I want to file a missing person’s report just to have some legal closure and remove my name from anything that could legally bind me to him. Others say I should let it go. If he has some DUI and hurts, or kills, another person because of it, I could be sued. Honestly, I have nothing left even before a lawsuit.

        • @[email protected]
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          07 months ago

          I remember you, I saw your post a few days ago. I am sorry for your situation. I hope you ended up filing the police report over the stolen car. It sounds like his friends did murder him. Hopefully if so you can get finality.

          • @ParabolicMotion
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            -47 months ago

            I really hope they didn’t. I first thought it was some cruel joke by my husband because he was unhappy with our marriage. I felt really ashamed to tell others about it. It also made me look crazy when they would pull out his license and insist they were my husband, to anyone that would question them about it. They would insist that they just grew their hair slightly longer, or that they had decided not to shave for a while. My husband did submit dna to an ancestry site years ago, and it would prove that his friends stole his identity, or are misusing it, at least. My husband is nearly 100% Eastern European, and his friends were not. They all have the same tattoo on their bicep. One of them has it backwards, and I called him out on it. I think that was the one that grabbed me by the hair and slammed my head against the wall, years ago.

            I’m starting to think it’s less of a team effort on some cruel joke against me, and more of a team effort by them to have him robbed of his car and other items.

            I think you’re right. I’m going to have to report him missing. It’s going to be humiliating, because they’ll probably just find him under some girl, in the county where his mom lives.

            • @Xaphanos
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              07 months ago

              You have a hard road. My aunt had a parallel type of situation. Her husband became an FBI fugitive for some very bad decisions. Not a bad man, just very poor judgement. She had to declare him missing.

              I wish you some kind of swift resolution. Please know this: it is hard, but manageable. Others have made similar journeys. Get help as you can and find your own strength. You can get through this to find peace again.

              • @ParabolicMotion
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                -37 months ago

                Thank you. I’m going to declare him missing soon. I’m just bracing myself for the embarrassment when he is found with some other woman, or perhaps even a new family, at this point.

                • @Xaphanos
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                  17 months ago

                  If I can offer something…

                  Those are not your embarrassment. My father confessed to his other daughter only as he was dying. She was 30 at the time - I was over 40. He had hidden her from us for all that time, disguising all of his time with her as business meetings.

                  Before he died, my mom got to hold HIS first grandchild while she still had none. She held my stepsister blameless - all she had done was be born. And my mom cried at my father’s wake - they had a lot of years together, and some were good. But we’ve all moved on. It’s been 20 years since he died.

                  My advice is to let the past stay in the past. It was, and reliving it won’t make it different. Be in the now and work towards your better future. I truly wish you peace on your journey. We all find it in the end.

    • @p5yk0t1km1r4ge
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      -47 months ago

      Look at you and every other virtue signaling higher than thou gaslighting pig really trying out here!