ERROR: Earth.exe has crashed@lemmy.dbzer0.com to Ye Power Trippin' Bastards@lemmy.dbzer0.comEnglish · 9 hours ago
ERROR: Earth.exe has crashed@lemmy.dbzer0.com to Ye Power Trippin' Bastards@lemmy.dbzer0.comEnglish · 9 hours ago
Honestly, I’m not mad, its just funny how state/corporate sponsored violence is all okay but a pleb making a joke (its not even a real threat c’mon) is not okay.
🤭
Delay, Deny, Depose. Remember, Remember the 4th of December.
neglected assistance is slightly different from violence though.
But insurance is supposed to payout when an insured person needs it. The only claims they should deny are fraudulent claims. There is an agreement, so neglecting the agreement is still liability.
Like a home care worker being employed and assigned to an elderly person, then decide to go on an hour phone call and not making sure the elderly person doesn’t like fall down or anything, then they finish their hour-long phone call and find that the person they were supposed to be taking care of have fallen down the stairs. Like the home care worker didn’t cause them to die, but its practically the same. There’s probably lawsuits and probably also criminal charges.
But in the CEO situation, the ananlogy would be more like the elderly person ask you to help them walk, and you just refuse to do your job, then they fall down the stairs and you don’t even call an ambulance while watching them die. That’s essentially what the healthcare executives are doing. They are neglecing to provide the service they agreed to while taking premiums. That should be criminal.
yeah, i’m not saying it’s not criminal and bad behavior, but it’s not violence. (it was called violence in the OP)
Denying healthcare is violence. Just because there’s layers of paper pushers in between the patient and the corporation denying care doesn’t change things.
Engels said it best:
Perspective can definitely change when one experiences needless suffering or death, or watches a loved one go through that