In the wake of the killing, widespread public animosity towards health insurers ― and UnitedHealthcare specifically ― may explain why the company quickly limited who could comment on their tribute to Thompson.

Still, people still found a way to express how they felt ― to the tune of more than 90,000 laughing reactions as of Friday.

  • HootinNHollerin@lemmy.world
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    20 days ago

    I don’t care if banned from LW I’m done w this instance

    Billionaires, and those like this guy who enable them, must face consequences

    This is a ripe time for a movement

    We must capitalize on this now. The trump trash have dominated any sense of a movement for far too long

    Death to tyrants

    Bats to bootlickers

      • HootinNHollerin@lemmy.world
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        6 days ago

        Because I already was!

        “Seems like justice was served” was all I commented to be banned

        This is my last comment from the instance in done w it. I encourage all to change instances. Fuck .world

      • Miles O'Brien@startrek.website
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        Posting about it is one thing.

        Specifically calling for violence is against LW’s TOS, and they seem to be ban happy when the violence is directed at the owning class.

        As for people calling for violence being posted, I’ve seen very few comments more than 30 minutes old on LW doing that, but plenty on other servers. I’m not sure how LW is handling other instance comments though.

      • Chozo@fedia.io
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        20 days ago

        Because extremist rhetoric is banned in any decent space.

          • Disaster@sh.itjust.works
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            20 days ago

            In the pearl-clutching liberal world where people still can’t understand why she lost when it was her turn

          • Chozo@fedia.io
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            20 days ago

            Advocating for anybody’s killing is extremist. It’s literally the most extreme thing you could inflict upon somebody.

            Revenge and justice aren’t the same thing.

            • halyk.the.red@lemmy.ml
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              19 days ago

              No, you’re right. It’s fine that these executives go into meetings and enact plans that harm and kill sick people, while they profit. They should be allowed to do that without consequence. The fact that this one man killed only one person, and without personal profit, is abhorrent.

            • Lucidlethargy@sh.itjust.works
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              19 days ago

              They actually sometimes are the same thing.

              Would any sane person advocate against Hitler’s death after learning what he did?

              The difference is that our government sanctioned that target ~80 years ago, but this one was against the law. Both people brought large numbers of innocent people to early graves in this world.

            • idiomaddict@lemmy.world
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              19 days ago

              When patients are denied necessary care, they suffer. I would argue that this was not an act of revenge, because that would have been much more gruesome.

    • Skiluros@sh.itjust.works
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      Billionaires, and those like this guy who enable them, must face consequences

      I would propose the following approach:

      You need to put them on trial in a legitimate court (i.e. exclude compromised judiciary systems).

      If the oligarch/senior lackey is found guilty, you could use real rehabilitation methods that would creates incentives for good behaviour for other criminals:

      1. Full asset seizure (every last cent, home, house, everything).
      2. Extended family and business partners being required to sign affidavits detailing their knowledge re: assets in [1], with an understanding that if the affidavit was found to have not been signed in good faith, they will be subject to full asset seizure and their own family and business partners will also have to sign similar affidavits for their own case. No statue of limitations for affidavits.
      3. 20 years mandatory live-in community service as junior support person at a hospice centre (minimum wage). Exact focus of community service would depend on crimes committed.

      I am not saying this is currently possible. Just pointing out that there are “win win” approaches that do not require extra-judicial killings (albeit the nature of human history is such that sometimes people are left with no other options).

      • HootinNHollerin@lemmy.world
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        19 days ago

        I agree that’s a more proper response. I was super drunk last night but there is no longer a court in America that isn’t corrupted because the Supreme Court is corrupted and they overrule

        • Skiluros@sh.itjust.works
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          19 days ago

          One could leverage fully independent courts/tribunals. I believe the ICJ has done something similar for countries with non-functioning judicial systems.

          You could start with the corrupt members of the highest court. This would be a good “shit just got real” moment for the oligarchs and their senior goons.

          I heard US supreme courts judges feel they are capable of working on complex cases past their 80s. They should be able to do a few more decades providing full-time community service para-legal support for honest pro bono lawyers as part of their rehabilitation program. 😀

          I am being glib of course. I recognize the challenges with my proposal in context of the US. But then again, every movement towards progress typically starts with something very simple, sometimes as simple as formulating and brain-storming ideas.

  • foggy@lemmy.world
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    20 days ago

    There’s no doubt in my mind that if I end up homeless on the back of some billionaire getting richer, I’m on a fuckin hunt.

    Bring me to jail, what, you think I don’t want that piece of dick cheese dead AND a roof over my head? Don’t tempt me with a good time.

    • CosmicTurtle0@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      Politicians but especially rich people seem to forget that when we have nothing to lose, that’s when revolutions happen.

      JFK’s quote has been ringing in my head since all this has happened: Those who make peaceful revolution impossible will make violent revolution inevitable.

      These assholes have stacked our government against us. Sure we have some good eggs but the level of progress especially in the last 20 years has slowed to a crawl.

      UHC shooter is the beginning.

      Remember: the 1% made the rules.

      • flicker@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        19 days ago

        Fun fact; I caught a 30 day ban once off /r/politics for a comment that was explicitly that quote by JFK, attributed to him. “Promoting violence.”

        • CosmicTurtle0@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          19 days ago

          The fuck are you still doing on reddit?!

          I haven’t looked back since I left and absolutely enjoy Lemmy.

          “Don’t half ass two things. Whole ass one thing.”

            • CosmicTurtle0@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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              19 days ago

              You’re on lemmy.world, which defederates faster than other instances.

              I left .world a while back. Even with NSFW turned off I still have good content.

              I have 6-hour top as my default sort.

            • flicker@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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              19 days ago

              I just left lemmy.world yesterday and I was blown away by the massive amount if content coming from instances I wasn’t seeing before.

              I don’t agree with having someone running my instance telling me I’m not allowed to see what people are posting. I can determine that for myself, thanks.

        • Lucidlethargy@sh.itjust.works
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          19 days ago

          I got banned for far dumber reasons, so yeah, I belive this 100%. Reddit is a cesspool, and /r/politics is one is the worst examples of propaganda out there. They silence people that voice opinions they don’t like on bogus charges every day.

  • twinnie@feddit.uk
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    As far as I’m concerned people like this are worse than Osama Bin Laden, so if you were dunking on him dying then why should this be any different? Because what he did was legal? At least Bin Laden had an ideology; he thought he was the goodie, no matter how fucked up that was. This guy profited from people’s death and suffering.

      • Skiluros@sh.itjust.works
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        I will preface this comment by saying that due to my ethnic background and atheism, I would probably be one of the first in line for a theocratic equivalent of the gulag. I will also add I am not American, but I have lived and traveled in North America, Europe and Asia for many years.

        The functional outcomes derived from the actions of US oligarchs and Osama Bin Laden are largely identical. Mass suffering, mass death, condemning many millions of people to a life of misery. If anything US oligarchs have an edge on Bin Laden due to the scale inherent to operating in the US and protection provided by the local judicial system and social attitudes.

        Consider Zuckerberg’s involvement in the Rohingya genocide.

        Now I don’t think Zuckerberg had any direct malicious intent here (unlike say Osama Bin Laden, in a different context of course), but what does it matter? His actions, callousness and supremacist attitude led to a large number of people getting killed and many more getting their lives ruined. But because of the compromised nature of the local judicial system, not only did he not have to take responsibility for this actions, but he even had the gal to claim that this was an example of how effective FB was. Do you think we would see a similar reaction if FB was used in hypothetical ethno-religious mass killings (e.g. US Catholics vs Protestants) in the continental US? I think not.

        Zuckerberg knowingly enabling the Rohingya genocide could be seen as a controversial argument. I do not. I think any real judicial authority should have seized all his assets (every last cent) and sent him for mandatory community service work for two decades as a junior latrine janitor on the island of Bhasan Char. What about a less “controversial” case?

        My favourite oligarch gang in the US are the Sacklers. These thugs set up what is essentially a massive drug cartel peddling one of the most deadly drug substance (we are not talking about LSD or MDMA). And yet all they got was a somewhat larger fine than usual that still allowed them to keep billions. Joaquín “El Chapo” Guzmán is got be pissed. 😆

        Now where does Bin Laden play into this? Both Bin Laden and US oligarchs do horrible things. But unlike US oligarchs, Bin Laden was quiet open about his intentions and did not try to hide behind PR or state that some court in Texas leveraged the 69th amendment of the US constitution to prove that his actions were legal and were about “fighting for freedom”. On the contrary, he could have just been doing blow, driving fast cars, chilling on yachts, like all the other elite princes in Saudi Arabia, but instead he gave up that life to fight for something he believed in.

        It was wrong, he was a bad person. I am not arguing against that. But how many US oligarchs have the guts to do something like that?

        And if the outcomes of the actions of US oligarchs are actually worse than Bin Laden, is it a stretch to say they are worse than Bin Laden?

      • Narri N.@lemmy.world
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        20 days ago

        Yeah, I guess. Does it pertain to first degree murder? And could it just devolve into a juridical fight? 'cause then I think it turns into whoever has more money to spend wins, so… What I’m suggesting is that we, the people, agree all-together to not rat the gunman (or -woman) out to the pigs.

            • zalgotext@sh.itjust.works
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              19 days ago

              Jury nullification isn’t some official* legal procedure or anything, it’s just the principle that a jury can choose to find someone not-guilty for reasons outside of the facts of the case at hand - they may think the law being broken is unjust, or they may think the punishment for the crime is too harsh, or they may just be protesting the legal system in general. It’s possible because generally two things are true about a trial ruled on by a jury of peers - a jury can’t be punished for an “incorrect” verdict, and a defendant can’t be tried for the same crime twice.

              • annHowe@lemmy.zip
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                19 days ago

                a jury can’t be punished for an “incorrect” verdict

                I agree with everything you said, but I just wanted to point out that a juror can’t legally be punished. I live in an area where both the city police and the county sheriffs are corrupt. They hold vendettas against anyone that pisses them off. One even stalked and assulted an ex using police lookup tools. Got caught, got slap on the wrist and he’s back at it, just more carefully now.

                My point is that it’s supposed to be that jurors can’t be punished for their decisions, but in reality they might have to watch their back if the piss off the arresting officer (or anyone with power).

                I hate living here. I wish I could afford to move.

        • Olgratin_Magmatoe@lemmy.world
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          19 days ago

          Jury nullification is most likely not going to happen. Speaking about it during selection will get you booted from selection, and being too obvious that it’s your intent will get you booted.

          With that said, it always is possible, even with a murder case like this. It is the logical consequence of a legal system such as ours were the jury cannot be forced to give a specific verdict, and the defendant cannot be tried twice.

  • wjrii@lemmy.world
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    I took one for the team and went to Fox News to read the user comments on the first story I could find about this. It’s pretty telling that even there, the overwhelming sense I got – in between the “Obamacare is why healthcare is so bad!” and the “where’s Hunter’s cocaine, Mister FBI?” and the “our so-called nation is secretly run by acolytes of a shady transnational world government” – is that they don’t understand why this is getting any more attention than any other random street crime in the big bad city.

    Even MAGA doesn’t care; wrong kind of billionaire, I guess.

    • Ledivin@lemmy.world
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      The MAGA public doesn’t like billionaires in general, they just like Trump and Musk. That’s it. It’s a cult of personality, not anything based on actual values or policies.

      Obviously MAGA is funded by them in the background, but the average MAGAt doesn’t know that or care.

      • Cornelius_Wangenheim@lemmy.world
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        Yeah, MAGA doesn’t have principles or anything even resembling a coherent world view.

        I’ve had more than a few conversations with MAGA types who agree massive corporations are running rampant and are a major problem, but then go on to advocate for deregulation.

        • Quadhammer@lemmy.world
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          No you see regulation is bad, because government.

          Which is a sentiment I could almost agree with if regulation wasn’t actually a tool in the arsenal for the working man and the community

        • buttfarts@lemy.lol
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          We all agree these problems exist but MAGA has been propagandized such that they are so ass backwards that they end up pushing the wrong way

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        19 days ago

        They only like things that may possibly be an advantage to them. Unless they are currently in a health care dispute with UHC, They honestly don’t give a rat’s ass what happens to anyone at that company.

      • Semi-Hemi-Lemmygod@lemmy.world
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        The MAGA public doesn’t like billionaires in general

        Yep. Their list of billionaires they hate has different ones at the top of the list but they hate billionaires, too. I had folks in MAGA hats tell me they liked Bernie for that reason alone.

  • malloc@lemmy.world
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    This company is absolutely tone deaf to the animosity around the death of this company units CEO.

    For decades they have been the dealers of death across the United States through their “delay, deny, defend” industry policies. Historical, among the worst offenders of this practice and it shows in their stock price.

    So now they act shocked when 1 no name, piece of shit (he was behind the decision to use AI to deny claims…), rich cunt gets gunned down in the streets like a stray dog? To UHC, this should just be another business day, business as usual.

    Short term results of his death:

    • UNH stock dip
    • profit maximizing policies put on short hold across industry (already seen 1 company pull back changes on anesthesia limits)
    • “fear” lingering in the minds of health insurance executives

    Long term:

    • as stocks recover and new administration rolls in, policies re-instated
    • install new generic cookie cutter CEO
    • 24/7/365 armed security details provided to C-level executives, and ultimately whatever costs passed down to policy holders
    • wait for media cycle to end/move on
    • nothing changes for the people

    One thing I do notice is an increase in bi-partisanship around the death of this one person. If it gains enough traction beyond the memes, could this be the catalyst that unites the working class against the rich thus causing real and permanent change?

    One can hope, but I’m honestly not holding my breath.

  • merc@sh.itjust.works
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    19 days ago

    What I wonder is what other industries might prompt the same level of hatred.

    Private prisons companies? Hedge funds? Drug companies? Cryptocurrency exchanges? Payday loan companies? Dollar stores?

    It would be a shame if it were only health insurance companies that were scared.

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    20 days ago

    We and our 870 partners store and access personal data, like browsing data or unique identifiers, on your device.

    Damn… Can’t wait to reach the 1k…

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    To be fair,bif Facebook had a “shrug” emoji, this would have never happened.

          • FelixCress@lemmy.world
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            Shrugging is not an “apathy”, it is “I don’t give a fuck about this guy” reaction. Now take your time.

            • WindyRebel@lemmy.world
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              I’d argue that shrugging is definitely apathy based on the definition of the word. Laughing in a mocking matter is lack, or rejection, of empathy.

              In either case, whatever.

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                It’s a fucking stupid thing to argue about but it seems idiotic to me to suggest “if people could’ve shrugged instead they would have”. Firstly how the fuck would anyone know this and secondly who gives a shit?

                • WindyRebel@lemmy.world
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                  No one knows it. Someone made a comment and now people are arguing over whether or not someone would push a button over another.

                  If presented both emojis, I would’ve chosen shrugged over laugh because I honestly don’t care.

                  I was just setting the record straight about definitions because Felix said shrugging is not apathy when it actually is via a definition of “a state of indifference or lack of interest, emotion, or concern about something.”

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      They turned off our ability to see because of the overwhelming amount of laugh reacts