On December 4, Brian Thompson, CEO of UnitedHealthcare, was shot and killed outside the entrance to the New York Hilton Midtown in Manhattan, NYC. He was in town to attend an annual investors meeting for UnitedHealth Group, the parent company of UnitedHealthcare.
Authorities believe the attack was not a random act and are investigating it as an assassination. The shooting occurred early in the morning and the suspect, described as a white man, fled the scene. As of the publication of this post the perp has not been apprehended.
No arrest.
No interrogation.
No motive.
Plenty of speculation to go around.
It is unclear what motivated the incident or whether it was tied to Mr. Thompson's work in the insurance industry. The police have yet to identify the shooter who is still on the loose.
Nevertheless, social media has exploded with an avalanche of vitriol, and glee over the murder of the insurance executive. Sure, I get it. People have had negative experiences with health insurance companies at some of the most difficult times of their lives. But in the absence of the facts and circumstances of this killing has anyone considered taking a moment to take a breath and not get over their skis?
I tried on a Face Book group to counsel restraint and got hammered. I was slammed for not embracing the notion that a man responsible for millions of deaths of people for money got his comeuppance.
UnitedHealthcare denied 32% more claims last year than any other insurer, it's not hard to figure out.
Posting a photo of Albert Bouria, CEO of Pfizer, from Prophetic Memetics someone else suggested that he just thought someone else might might be curious.
Anybody else, beside me, consider that a passive aggressive threat instead of your garden variety internet troll?
It is interesting to me the instances of individuals who have flippantly shared that their grievances (large or small, real or perceived) are justifiably resolved at the point of a gun.
It is a chilling observation to note that killing someone for a slight, a political difference or an insurance dispute is justified.
Regrettably, this is what can happen when there are no appropriate channels for people to make meaningful change to a malign system. The Supreme Court has allowed unlimited money in our politics and politicians are voting with their corporate overlords, including health insurance companies.
My sense is that government is broken and simply does not work very well for the average American. As a consequence they despair.
If this shooter becomes a folk hero it will be appalling; but not surprising. I have shared many times that capitalism is messy business. Perhaps we've arrived at a Storm the Bastille moment where the murder of both oligarchs or a neighbor with an offending bumper sticker becomes normalized.
I sure hope not....
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