Deny, Defend, Depose: Healthcare worker perspective
11 months ago
Currently in the life of a Sunflion F-22...
I would like everyone know, who is not in the healthcare industry that we are all tired, and disgusted at healthcare legislation, policy, and that includes insurance beuracracy.
Our bitter pill we as workers who are also affected by insurance denial of claims and financial hardship, family health woes, are that while this will rattle the ultra rich CEO demographic, the philosophy that allows these systems to *occur* and *prosper* still has yet to be dismantled. It should be understood that how insurance claims are processed is affected SO much by politics, when you vote you are also voting how your state and federal body regulate healthcare companies.
As a law abiding citizen who prefers due process and civil order, I cannot ever say I condone or condone brazen assassination/murder, I can only say that it bodes unwell for the political arena and high profile capitalists to constantly ignore the rage of the American public that is so fed up, they will vote a racist rapist cheesebag into office while simultaneously chant for blood of CEOs that are then assassinated outside of 1 on 1 armed combat.
Dragoneer is still dead because of the insurance companies and corporations that violate and abuse an ill populace while making record profits even within "inflation", even if his actual death can be tied to staff negligence. What forces were present to make it unreasonable to seek different and more competent providers? So many factors are present in stories like that. Insurance aspects are definitely a part of people struggling to pay for care.
Now, What do we actually call it when companies make record profits, but "inflation" as a phrase is tossed around like toilet paper, from food conglomerates, airlines, to healthcare claims processing?
Listen, I used to make between $10-$11.50 doing what *I am still doing* a decade later. My pay is now between $19-$20 and will only go up to either $21 or $22 next year based on my "*experience*". The union bargaining for home healthcare workers leads for everyone to be at $20 for entry level pay. I'm at 38/40 work credits in terms of being able to apply for social security and not be denied on *basis* of not having enough work experience via said credits. I have put in my time to the American workforce 100%. I have seen things that demonstrate why the USA is a laughing stock for healthcare except for the rich, who are able to afford all the highly skilled people who earned their credentials and operate here. Its horrific.
It does something to you. Changes something in your psyche.
The only thing I can do aside from illegally incite violence and crime is tell people to not just vote, but *communicate* with your local and federal politicians and put your stories and desires out there.
In the USA, murder is not ever generally justified legally, and the political arena is still the safer option to joust in to see lasting change vs short term vindication
While I cannot condone murder, I can say that violence should be expected by people in power if they are not able to gracefully meet the demands and struggles of the population they preside over. Ineptitude should not be so prolific that anyone has to die in a national, highly publicized spectacle in order to get people to consider:
"Am I the one who let the vampires in, or have I been the vampire the whole time?"
Our bitter pill we as workers who are also affected by insurance denial of claims and financial hardship, family health woes, are that while this will rattle the ultra rich CEO demographic, the philosophy that allows these systems to *occur* and *prosper* still has yet to be dismantled. It should be understood that how insurance claims are processed is affected SO much by politics, when you vote you are also voting how your state and federal body regulate healthcare companies.
As a law abiding citizen who prefers due process and civil order, I cannot ever say I condone or condone brazen assassination/murder, I can only say that it bodes unwell for the political arena and high profile capitalists to constantly ignore the rage of the American public that is so fed up, they will vote a racist rapist cheesebag into office while simultaneously chant for blood of CEOs that are then assassinated outside of 1 on 1 armed combat.
Dragoneer is still dead because of the insurance companies and corporations that violate and abuse an ill populace while making record profits even within "inflation", even if his actual death can be tied to staff negligence. What forces were present to make it unreasonable to seek different and more competent providers? So many factors are present in stories like that. Insurance aspects are definitely a part of people struggling to pay for care.
Now, What do we actually call it when companies make record profits, but "inflation" as a phrase is tossed around like toilet paper, from food conglomerates, airlines, to healthcare claims processing?
Listen, I used to make between $10-$11.50 doing what *I am still doing* a decade later. My pay is now between $19-$20 and will only go up to either $21 or $22 next year based on my "*experience*". The union bargaining for home healthcare workers leads for everyone to be at $20 for entry level pay. I'm at 38/40 work credits in terms of being able to apply for social security and not be denied on *basis* of not having enough work experience via said credits. I have put in my time to the American workforce 100%. I have seen things that demonstrate why the USA is a laughing stock for healthcare except for the rich, who are able to afford all the highly skilled people who earned their credentials and operate here. Its horrific.
It does something to you. Changes something in your psyche.
The only thing I can do aside from illegally incite violence and crime is tell people to not just vote, but *communicate* with your local and federal politicians and put your stories and desires out there.
In the USA, murder is not ever generally justified legally, and the political arena is still the safer option to joust in to see lasting change vs short term vindication
While I cannot condone murder, I can say that violence should be expected by people in power if they are not able to gracefully meet the demands and struggles of the population they preside over. Ineptitude should not be so prolific that anyone has to die in a national, highly publicized spectacle in order to get people to consider:
"Am I the one who let the vampires in, or have I been the vampire the whole time?"
FA+


Take care
Keep being creative, I appreciate you