• IninewCrow@lemmy.ca
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    2 days ago

    It’s a similar comparison to Luigi Mangione

    One person was responsible for killing or leading to the deaths of thousands and possibly millions of people to an early death - no one bats an eye

    One person was responsible for directly killing one other person - the whole country loses their minds

    • TonyOstrich@lemmy.world
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      18 hours ago

      I haven’t quite figured out how to put it into words but in my mind it seems like capitalism and Nazi Germany or the USSR share a core mechanism. A single death is a tragedy, but many deaths are a statistic. When a singular person does something bad they need to be punished. If a system does something bad, even if a singular person or group of people were directly responsible for setting up the system they do not receive the consequences.

      It’s also the reason automated systems being used for making decisions that affect real human lives bother me so much right now. In a vacuum I don’t actually have a problem with them, but unless laws and regulations with teeth are put in place to hold those that implement them responsible for their mistakes then under our current system by definition they will only ever be used to maximize profits and minimize culpability.

      • MystikIncarnate@lemmy.ca
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        17 hours ago

        Maximizing profits and missing culpability is capitalism, working as intended.

        With that said, the system is only working on behalf of those with the money. The 0.1%

        I say again: the system is working as intended.

    • zarkanian@sh.itjust.works
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      1 day ago

      Yeah, because it breaks the social order. The number of people killed by the health insurance industry must be astronomical. But it’s No Big Deal, because it’s Business As Usual.

      Somebody killing a CEO, though. That is not business as usual.

    • UnderpantsWeevil@lemmy.world
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      2 days ago

      So much of this is filtered through the national corporate media. Quite a few people bat an eye at the vulgar abuse of power by insurance adjusters. But they aren’t afforded a platform on your Cable News outlet of choice.

      Vanishingly few people were sympathetic towards an unknown CEO of a notoriously skinflint insurance company. But he was lionized and eulogized on every national news station.

      In the same vein, most people slept through Kapernick taking a knee. It wasn’t properly news until weeks after he first did it, in large part because it took that long for right-wing anchors to notice. By contrast, the Elon Fascist Dab was headline news within seconds of him performing it and only got talked down to “Autistic Man’s Arm Just Did That And It’s Ablest Of You To Notice” after days of equivocating in papers and news channels of record.

      The Consent, folks. Its being Manufactured.

      • hoshikarakitaridia@lemmy.world
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        2 days ago

        Omfg I’m gonna stab someone. How the hell are they trying to use autism as an explanation?

        This is not how any of this works. You don’t start stimming in a perfect right wing gesture. He never did something like this before in public. He also doesn’t look startled or anything.

        I’m mad now. How did this chipmunk become a government advisor? I want him to trip on Lego so bad.

    • GooberEar@lemmy.wtf
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      2 days ago

      Oh yeah, Luigi definitely came up as a topic of discussion over the holidays when I was visiting the conservative side of my family. I considered it a win that they at least acknowledged that the legal system and media works differently for the rich and powerful. I mean, common ground is common ground.

    • Aceticon@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      2 days ago

      It’s not just the Fascist Far-Right who exploit the human tendency for Tribalism, the Neoliberal Far-Right does it too, they just mix it a bit more with exploiting other cognitive weaknesses in human beings.

      That said, the latter political group did fail miserably in getting people to feel like the Healthcare Insurer CEO “is one of us” and Luigi “is one of them” possibly because all the usual group definitions the Neolibs tried to push to get people into group-oriented thinking on the side of the CEO (strivers vs skivers, family man vs lone wolf and so on - just read the newspaper articles and you’ll spot the framing) failed as people already felt more like the victims of businesses like Healthcare Insurance than “winners” of the profits such business make.