This is a genuine question.

I have a hard time with this. My righteous side wants him to face an appropriate sentence, but my pessimistic side thinks this might have set a great example for CEOs to always maintain a level of humanity or face unforseen consequences.

P.S. this topic is highly controversial and I want actual opinions so let’s be civil.

And if you’re a mod, delete this if the post is inappropriate or if it gets too heated.

  • sp3ctr4l
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    4 days ago

    Nope.

    If Trump can get alway with almost all of his bullshit, if the Supreme Court can just hurr durr away a hundred + years of legal precedent, then this whole system is bullshit.

    Anybody that is charge of or oversees the systemic application of violence toward great numbers of people, who is legally allowed to do so, in a system where the common person has 0 chance of ever altering this system to police itself and actually enact justice by preventing said person from doing that and prosecuting them for their crimes against the people…

    Anyone in such a position should be afraid, should keep suffering consequences until theyfinally figure out that they need to acquiesce to a reformation of the system, need to stop fucking over millions for the grotesque enrichment of thousands.

    When the game is rigged against you, play by your own rules, otherwise you guarantee your own defeat.

  • @pyre
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    214 days ago

    yes, of course. and found not guilty, to send a message.

  • @[email protected]
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    474 days ago

    No. I hope he’s never found. I hope it destroys the careers of all the cops and politicians blowing shitloads of resources looking for him while they barely look at crimes against normal people. I hope all these insurance executives wake up in a cold sweat every night worrying that they’ll be next. That’s what’s best for the world.

  • @[email protected]
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    965 days ago

    Yes, I do.

    I want the state to make it crystal clear that this guy was the shooter. That he did it. That he had no legal justification to do it. That his actions were undeniably criminal, and that his crime was clearly premeditated.

    And then I want a jury of his peers to return a “not guilty” verdict, and every scumbag business executive across the country suddenly deciding to take an early retirement.

    His jury can’t return that not guilty verdict if he isn’t prosecuted.

  • Maeve
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    344 days ago

    I want the executives, boards, and shareholders that effectively murder millions every year to be prosecuted.

  • @masquenox
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    4 days ago

    Do you want the murderer of the UnitHealthcare CEO prosecuted?

    Nope. Killing a billionaire parasite doesn’t make one a murderer - it merely makes one a credit to the human race.

    P.S. this topic is highly controversial

    Not really.

  • @[email protected]
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    214 days ago

    No, because I don’t see any point to it. If they manage to catch him, they may as well just kill him on the spot when they get him, as I have no faith that his trial would be anything more than a farce to try and present some sense of following process and norms, while guaranteeing he gets some insane sentence, only to be found mysteriously to have hung himself. I’m sure that, somehow, a jury of his peers will be comprised solely of the 12 most ghoulish residents of NYC one could find, and they’ll probably try to shop around for the worst judge they can to hear the whole thing.

  • @RedAggroBest
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    214 days ago

    ITT: Nobody understands the difference between being prosecuted and convicted.

    He should absolutely be prosecuted, he murdered someone. Should he be convicted of this murder? Fuck no, and I actually think a jury might agree with me.

  • @leadore
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    545 days ago

    Jury selection question to weed out biased jurors: “Have you ever had a claim that was unfairly denied?”

    Weeks later: “We have been unable to find enough jurors to try the case.”

  • @[email protected]
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    355 days ago

    Hear me out before you rage:

    In theory? I believe that killings warrant investigation, prosecution and trial, no matter their intention, though the intention should factor into the result of the process. I want him to be prosecuted with the same intensity as any other killing would be, and if found, given a fair trial, convicted for whatever charge applies, as would be proper for a functioning judicial system. But then I’d want to see him pardoned as political expression of his popular support (and the fact that his victim was part of a deeply inhuman complex of exploitation).

    In practice? I hope they never find him. Appropriate intensity of investigation? Orderly arrest? Fair treatment as prisoner? Fair trial? Fair charges? Fair conviction? Fat chance. Pardoned? Not even a chance.

    I want him to go without punishment more than I want to hope for a fair process, and I couldn’t believe in the latter in any case.

  • @TommySoda
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    2596 days ago

    If he gets caught, then I’d say yes. Murder should be treated as murder regardless of what the reason is. Making exceptions is never a good idea.

    I just hope he doesn’t get caught.

    • nocturne
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      1816 days ago

      Then all of the healthcare companies that allow people to die because they will not cover them need to be prosecuted, every executive, every decision maker.

      • @friend_of_satan
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        6 days ago

        The greatest evil is not now done in those sordid “dens of crime” that Dickens loved to paint. It is not done even in concentration camps and labour camps. In those we see its final result. But it is conceived and ordered (moved, seconded, carried, and minuted) in clean, carpeted, warmed, and well-lighted offices, by quiet men with white collars and cut fingernails and smooth-shaven cheeks who do not need to raise their voice.

        CS Lewis - Screwtape Letters (preface)

      • fmstrat
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        35 days ago

        Population Health needs a regulated definition.

    • TerkErJerbs
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      6 days ago

      Brian Thompson and his co-workers murder hundreds of thousands of people with systemic neglect, spreadsheets, and lawyers. They murder in broad daylight, during business hours. And yet they’re comfortable, well paid, successful people who will never see a day in jail. What they’re doing isn’t even considered a crime.

      I hope he doesn’t get caught, also. Because the same laws that protect those fucking ghouls will crush him for bringing attention to the grift.

      • @TommySoda
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        126 days ago

        Like I said, making exceptions is always a bad idea. It’s how these fuck heads even get away with it. But at the same time I can’t agree with exceptions even if I agree with the reason behind it.

      • @[email protected]
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        36 days ago

        they’re comfortable, well paid, successful people who will never see a day in jail.

        They also run the risk of getting assassinated by the people who they have exploited, so we’ll see how comfortable they remain in the future.

    • @[email protected]
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      446 days ago

      Making exceptions is never a good idea.

      Why not? The whole reason we have judicial discretion is that every crime departs from the platonic ideal in one way or another.

      The working class has been losing a class war for decades without ever properly noticing that it was happening. Working Americans have been dying in that war, and now someone struck back.

      I’ll be sold on the “no exceptions” ideal when we haul in the corporate murderers alongside the people who fought back.

      Jury nullification is the other acceptable option.

      • @TommySoda
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        136 days ago

        Yeah, that’s kinda my point. The system is fucked beyond repair specifically because these people running the companies get exceptions. These people have basically let thousands of people die for the sake of money. So like I said before, murder is murder and should be treated as such.

        • comfy
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          75 days ago

          Given the perspective you described, I would consider the actions of the company to be systematic mass murder who the legal system fails to stop, and the actions of the shooter to be community defense against a mass murderer. They’re certainly not equivalent, and I don’t see what the benefit is of treating that defense equally to even one callous for-profit murder.

          The problem isn’t that exceptions are made and therefore all crimes should be treated in an ignorant vacuum. The problem is that the idealist legal system doesn’t even consider indirect suffering as the violence it is, because the legal system is ultimately beholden to the power of capital (money buys politicians and the media power to make them win, politicians write laws).

    • @[email protected]
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      106 days ago

      I’m confident that someone will get caught and be made into an example.

      Whether they were the one that actually did it is immaterial.

    • @[email protected]
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      35 days ago

      2 or so years ago I’d have agreed with you.

      But it’s become clear that the wealthy and powerful are beyond the reach of our justice system. coughdementedfeloninthewhitehousecough

      So fuck 'em.

      I understand why they will prosecute him if they catch him, but I wish for him to never get caught, and I feel really confident (given the other signs of planning) that the phone, water bottle, and very public appearance at Starbucks in recognizable clothing are nothing but a red herring.

    • @[email protected]
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      15 days ago

      I hear and understand your point, and I can’t say that I disagree with it.

      That being said, I sure as hell wouldn’t convict the guy.

    • @[email protected]
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      16 days ago

      I just hope he doesn’t get caught.

      he will get caught. they already have his photo, he is not professional hitman, he can only evade for so long when there is the whole country’s law enforcement after him.

      • @TommySoda
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        15 days ago

        Except the photo they have of him with his face visible isn’t even the same guy. Doesn’t even have the same clothes or backpack. So unless this dude is proficient at changing his clothes and ditching a backpack all while riding an electric scooter down the street in New York, then they have the wrong guy in that photo.

          • @[email protected]
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            13 days ago

            The multiple photos with a face showing, has a different coat, hood, and backpack. Go look again.

                • @[email protected]
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                  03 days ago

                  you do understand that these photos are from different place and different time, right?

                  the black backpack seems more like some shoulder duffel bag to me i assume it is from the hostel checkin. people don’t travel around the city with the same luggage they used for inter-city travel.

                  people also can have different clothes for different occasion, like putting on some light rain or wind-proof jacket. it can also be shitty compression from some shitty camera.

                  it is the same person ffs, look at his face, that nose could have passport of its own.

  • @[email protected]
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    184 days ago

    You gotta weigh the decision, on one hand he shot and killed one person, on the other hand the dude he killed was allowing sick people to die unnecessary deaths so he could get his bonus.

    So it’s a big old fat no from me, that’s a greater good scenario.

  • @LavenderDay3544
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    325 days ago

    No. If murdering cops can get away with it, so should someone who killed a guy who has indirectly killed millions through the racket that is health insurance.

  • @inv3r510n
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    5 days ago

    Absofuckinglutely not. I want him to never be found and continue to off health insurance CEOs one by one until we get universal healthcare like the rest of the developed world. And after he’s through with them there’s a whole list of other rich assholes that the world would be better off without, starting with the defense contractors.

  • @[email protected]
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    1766 days ago

    Maybe get a fine for .0005% of their net worth. You know, so they don’t do it again.

    That’s how it works, right?