I've been closely following (read: checking the tag on Tumblr) the story about the guy who shot the CEO of a health insurance company and I have to say, from the point of view of someone who lives in a country where universal health services are provided by the government free of cost since before I was born... the reaction I'm seeing is a relief. Americans really need to get angrier about this shit. Everytime I read a story about someone begging others to not call an ambulance because this could bankrupt them and their children, I get shivers down my spine. The only people surprised by the joyful reaction this assassination has been getting are the people very likely to be targets of the next assassination. Stay mad!
if you suddenly don’t support the shooter bc he’s right wing I’m shaking you like a rag doll I’m throwing you into mount doom please look me in the eyes and remember that your biggest battle is not left vs right it is up versus down. they want you divided. keep your eyes on the prize. you want to eat the rich? so do the millions living in rural america. so do your farmers, your electricians, your welders, your fishermen. the men and women’s bodies who are exploited for labor. the class disparity the fear mongering the human rights violations stems from ABOVE!! they want you to despise each other to alienate each other to think we are not both human beings suffering for their profit. do not cover your eyes with their wool
I want to wish the brian thompson shooter a very good night, an amazing weekend and a safe, anonymous life. I hope they never even come close to catching you, king.
Also, I have a list if you want to do it again.
Hey listen. A bunch of people will now try to convince the public that the killing of Brian Thompson was ethically wrong. They will try to use the same old tired arguments: that murder is always wrong, that we should stand against political violence in all forms, that CEOs are people too, etc.
Now, you probably won’t fall for all that bullshit, but a lot of people might. Here is what you need to tell them in return - it’s not guaranteed to change their minds, but every time you offer someone a chance to accept the truth you’re making it ever so more likely to take it.
In philosophy, the idea that people should never do certain “bad” things (e.g. killing) is called deontology. The thing is, unlike utilitarianism (which states people should choose actions that create the most wellbeing in society), deontology is inherently flawed as a morality system.
See, only through deontology can people end up finding themselves having to choose outcomes that will lead to more suffering in the world; think, the trolley problem. Now, ask yourself, what kind of morality system expects its followers to selfishly pick the choice that ensures their own moral purity, even if it dooms the wellbeing of possibly hundreds or millions of others?
Understanding this, you might ask yourself: who benefits from having deontology be the crux of understanding morality for so many people? Who benefits uplifting rules like the Ten Commandments as the ultimate guideline to ethics, as opposed to what it was in the original context of it’s religion - a simple list of base laws meant to instruct a small group of escaped slaves several thousand years ago?
The answer is twofold. First, there are the authoritarians, who wish to instill obedience by making people believe that breaking their rules, no matter how justified, is wrong. Secondly, there are the bystanders, who watch nervously as the world crumbles around them, but excuse their inaction by latching onto a false belief that they are still somehow better than the people who are doing something about it in a way they find aesthetically displeasing.
Therefore, it is imperative to look at the world through a utilitarian perspective, and judge every incident like so. Brian Thompson is part of a very exclusive club; he had wronged so many people so severely that the suffering caused to him and his loved ones by his murder is still innumerably outmatched by the joy his unlikely retribution will give the literal millions of people he’s wronged.
Remember, by similar logic it is still very unethical to kill 98% of people, so think of all the choices Thompson had to make to put himself in the top 0.1% of the 2% of people who’s murders can be justified. In a better society, a society that prevents and punishes exploitation, it would be hard to even conceive of a murder that could ever be so righteous.
In fact, in a society that uses classism and bigotry to block people from achieving their fullest potential through non-violent means, we must celebrate those who risk their lives and legal rights to push humanity forward, bringing to justice the true criminals of decency.
TLDR: Brian had it coming.
good things will happen 🧿
things that are meant to be will fall into place 🧿
Reblogging again I think, but U.H.C actually wants to not pay for anesthesia, so people might soon be awake for surgery
Brian Thompson went into work every day and made decisions that he knew would lead to death and suffering on a truly obscene scale, all in the name of profit. He was a murderer and a monster whose atrocities eclipse those of anyone on death row.
The fact that his weapon of choice was a bureaucratic system that is legally recognized as legitimate does not make him any less culpable for the lives he and his ilk have destroyed, and in fact only allowed him to hurt people on an even larger scale.
I am only saddened by the fact that his death will in no way impede the apparatus he was in charge of from continuing to hurt people.
Can we all just openly admit that we’re secretly cheering on the uhc ceo assassin and hoping he never gets caught?
Stop pussyfooting around. The man took out a prolific serial killer that was simply protected by enough company layers to manage to legally absolve his individual responsibility.
I don’t give a fuck about his blood money kids or wife. They knew what he did for a living.
If you think this is me condoning violence, get a grip and clutch your pearls elsewhere.
i've seen enough horror movies starring upper-middle-income white families stuck in spacious haunted mansions. gimme stories about millennials stuck in haunted studio apartments. consider the realism:
why is this protagonist staying in an obviously haunted building despite the glaring warning signs? because a week at a motel would send them spiraling into credit card debt, they'll take their chances with the vengeful spirits. why did they chose this apartment complex to begin with, despite the many many unexplained mysterious deaths that show up on the first page of a google search? hon some of us don't have the credit score to move away from high (paranormal) crime areas. how could i be so careless as to sign a soul-binding contract with a demonic entity? bitch they're called LANDLORDS
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