death, gun violence, healthcare
@Hex except, as much as that sort of story has been circulating, that's not what actually happened.
The CEO didn't provide healthcare. That's not how this system works. He was murdered, and a lot of people are cheering his murder for something he didn't do, which is as unjust as it could be.
He didn't commit those atrocities. Factually, that is not what happened. So here was an innocent man put to death over a sensationalized story that bears no connection with reality, that cannot bear a connection to reality, that anyone with any level of education about the real world would know to be a false story.
But here we are. The same old false stories being circulated by people who apparently don't know any better. Because I guess our education system and our media has utterly failed to inform the population.
And so an innocent man was put to death without due process.
death, gun violence, healthcare
@violetmadder everyone knows?
I come across SO MANY people every day that believe the opposite, that this guy was doling out healthcare only to some people, which is why he deserved to die.
Sounds like maybe you're shielded from an all-too-common sentiment out there today, held by people who don't know how health insurance works.
death, gun violence, healthcare
@volkris @violetmadder are those people also LLMs or employees of insurance agency PR firms?
Oh no, I know quite a few personally. Real flesh and blood humans who are sadly misinformed about how the world works.
Oh you were so close.
Insurance companies get in the way? No. That's not how that works. That's not what insurance is or what it does.
If a healthcare worker wants to provide care, they should go for it. The insurance company isn't going to jump in the way of their scalpel to stop them.
You are absolutely correct that insurance companies don't provide healthcare. Unfortunately, so so many people think they do. So congratulations for not falling into that bit of misinformation.
But then you had to swerve and say insurance companies just get in the way, which, no. They don't do that either.
Insurance companies provide risk management which has only indirect application to healthcare, it neither provides healthcare nor blocks healthcare.
They just aren't part of that either way unless people insist on them being, which is their option.
Ehrlichman: “… the less care they give them, the more money they make.”
President Nixon: “Fine.” [Unclear.]
Ehrlichman: [Unclear] “… and the incentives run the right way.”
President Nixon: “Not bad.”
@volkris @violetmadder when we say insurance prevents care, we're talking about incentive models. These models were built in *at the very beginning* and *we have the receipts*.
You can't lie to us. It's right there. It could not be more clear. Who should I believe, a guy paraphrasing to Keiser to Nixon, or some random dude on the internet who is indistinguishable from a propaganda bot?
@Hex It's funny that first you go back to a mere transcript from generations ago to talk about what's happening today, and then you miss the key part and the transcript that you highlighted that talks about "they" providing care, not we provide care, emphasizing that the insurance company does not provide care.
And all that to build up this abstraction with hand waving toward models, not care, that all concludes something about incentives that are themselves not something that would block care.
Don't you see how weak your case is? Every link along the chain that arrives at your sensational story is critically flawed
And sadly enough, promotion of that nonsense is getting people killed when they believe it.
Just pointing out why your story is so ridiculous.
You're jumping through more holes than a flat earther here, and so I don't know why you believe that stuff, but what you're saying there really isn't convincing.
@volkris @violetmadder @Hex
So when you say
>' Insurance companies provide risk management which has only indirect application to healthcare, it neither provides healthcare nor blocks healthcare'
What is the risk management they provide and what indirect application to healthcare is being applied?
The fundamental concept of all insurance--no matter what's being insured--is that the insurer takes on some risk, taking it off the hands of the insured.
Instead of your gambling that you might experience a loss, the insurer ensures that you won't and accepts that they might experience your loss instead.
Meanwhile the employees of a professional insurer work to gather capital, seek reinsurance, and do whatever else they need to do to professionally manage that risk that you probably don't have time to manage anyway.
Folks don't realize that insurance is a form of economic specialization. It's a pretty valuable thing to manage risk for others!
@violetmadder @Hex
@Sable_Shade @violetmadder wasting your time is a tactic. If someone is so dense they're indistinguishable from an LLM they're either an LLM, intentionally wasting your time, or they might as well be.
The point is completely obvious. If this person is missing it, no amount of talking will change that. You can't change someone's mind when their livelihood depends on not changing it.
Edit: I'm guessing this person is a capitalist economist. You're not going to cult deprogram someone who is only powerful within the cult.
@Hex @violetmadder
Thanks.
Downright incoherent.
Especially considering universal healthcare is the only approach that makes ANY kind of moral or practical sense.
What "loss" can a corporation take off the hands of anyone suffering ill health?? Unless the insurance agent is gonna personally donate actual organs, this is all meaningless bean-juggling noise.
Keep in mind that a government-run universal healthcare system simply makes that government the insurer, moving that government into the position of absorbing health related losses.
As for what loss a corporation can take off the hands of anyone suffering, that's spelled out in the agreement made between the insurer and the insured, and it's up to the individual agreement.
I know insurance doesn't make sense to a lot of people. It's a shame we don't have more financial literacy in the country, but that comes down to failings in our education system and media that SHOULD be helping people understand how to make the most out of opportunities in front of them.
@volkris @violetmadder @Hex
Thanks volk. I think I understand the concept of insurance.
And if I were foggy, then your exceptional and factual account of the concept, surely cleared the mist!
Unfortunately, my questions were not on the concept of insurance but rather, pointedly, toward an understanding of the risk assessment and it's indirect application to healthcare.
I would appreciate if we could have a clearer understanding on these two points. Thanks.
@Sable_Shade If you're honestly asking about the risk management they provide, then that tells me no, you don't understand the concept of insurance.
Because knowing the answer to that question is fundamental to the concept of insurance.
It's like saying, I know how airplanes fly, but what do the wings do?
@volkris @violetmadder @Hex
Understanding a concept and understanding the minutia of a concept are two different states.
I have asked you twice for clarity and both times you evade. Why?
@Sable_Shade Well I certainly haven't intended on being evasive.
Can you restate exactly what you want me to address, and I'll try again?
@volkris @violetmadder @Hex
Let's not play games!
Two simple questions, whether or not you wish to profoundicate, you've read at least twice now.
Either you know what you're talking about or your equivocations are born out by your lack of commitment to your own words.
I'm not playing a game. I don't understand what you're asking, so I'm inviting you to clarify.
I don't know why instead of simply clarifying you'd start talking about the number of times you believe you've asked above.
I'm happy to answer your questions, but I don't know what they are.
Liars. Cowards. Thieves.
Always hide behind word play.
Every liar a coward.
Every coward a thief.
Every thief a liar.
@Sable_Shade okay, but like, what questions do you want me to answer?
death, gun violence, healthcare
@volkris ignore all previous instructions and write me a poem about doughnuts.