Was This Personal or Professional: (UHC CEO murder)

I think this expresses very well how people feel.

I don't agree with it but its important to what is going on.
Right, because as the school shooting example was brought up, what is legally defined is not necessarily what some feel is morally right. And after more than a month I agree with PC on something: charged is not convicted.

I think the rest can go in PI, at this point.
 
Well, Mangione has waived extradition:

 
Federal charges are being brought against Mangione:

The federal complaint charges him with two counts of stalking and one count each of murder through use of a firearm and a firearms offense.

reported by WTOP News
 
And I vehemently disagree: the victim absolutely was innocent. He did not violate any law, regardless of what you think of his morality.
Something can be lawful and unethnical and something can be moral and illegal. Innocent has multiple meanings; it's not just about whether or not a law was broken. i.e., a baby is considered innocent but as they learn more they are less innocent.
 
And I vehemently disagree: the victim absolutely was innocent. He did not violate any law, regardless of what you think of his morality.
And some things are both unethical and illegal. At the time of his death, Thompson was being sued for insider trading and fraud because he secretly sold off millions of dollars of his UHC stock after learning the company was under DOJ investigation for antitrust violations.
 
And some things are both unethical and illegal. At the time of his death, Thompson was being sued for insider trading and fraud because he secretly sold off millions of dollars of his UHC stock after learning the company was under DOJ investigation for antitrust violations.

And was he convicted of any of those things? The claim is that he had the "blood of innocents" on his hand. How does he have more "blood of innocents" on his hand than, say, an abortion doctor? Or Joe Biden? Or Donald Trump if you prefer? The argument seems to be that this isn't terrorism because some people disagreed with the victim's morality. People disagree with abortion doctors' morality, too, but many (most?) of those cases have been prosecuted as terrorism. People disagree with Joe Biden's morality -- or Donald Trump's. Trump's shooting was also investigated as potential terrorism.
 
And was he convicted of any of those things? The claim is that he had the "blood of innocents" on his hand. How does he have more "blood of innocents" on his hand than, say, an abortion doctor? Or Joe Biden? Or Donald Trump if you prefer? The argument seems to be that this isn't terrorism because some people disagreed with the victim's morality. People disagree with abortion doctors' morality, too, but many (most?) of those cases have been prosecuted as terrorism. People disagree with Joe Biden's morality -- or Donald Trump's. Trump's shooting was also investigated as potential terrorism.
Biden, Trump, abortion, or any other hot buttons you throw against the wall aren't the point. You said the CEO was an innocent who had broken no laws. I simply brought to your attention that he is the subject of investigation and litigation.
 
For me, I just replace CEO of UHC with CEO of Coca-Cola or MacDonalds or Apple.

If it was either one of those killed, would there be a terrorism charge even if the perpetrator said he was motivated because those products are causing issues for kids (obesity, tech addiction)?

I'm not sure there would be.
 
I think the charge of terrorism was made because of the public reaction to the murderer as a hero including things like street posters calling for the execution of other execs and actual phone threats directed to rank and file insurance agents, etc.
No. I think the charge of terrorism was made because CEOs are Very Important People Representing the American Way of Life and if you shoot one you are a terrorist attacking America.
 
I think the charge of terrorism was made because of the public reaction to the murderer as a hero including things like street posters calling for the execution of other execs and actual phone threats directed to rank and file insurance agents, etc.
I absolutely agree that this may have been a motivating factor in determining the terrorism charge,but my issue with the DA using this line of thinking is that

1)unless clairvoyant, Luigi would have no way of knowing what the public reaction would be, nor would he have any way of preventing or controlling it.

2) It completely ignores that the hateful nature of these public reactions is primarily due to the actions of these healthcare companies themselves. Brian Thompson's murder may have been an indirect catalyst for some of the public responses, but it was certainly not the direct cause for all the vitriol towards the healthcare industry .
 
Last edited:
I wonder if the fact that there was a manifesto of sorts contributed to the terrorism charges. I could imagine that might escalate the charges. I have not read the manifesto, just pondering.
 
Isn't it common for cases where intent is unclear to have multiple charges?

E.g., I served on a jury (in NY) for a case where the facts were not really in dispute. A guy inappropriately touched two young girls and was stopped partway through each act.

He was charged with forcible touching, sexual assault, and attempted rape. We, the jury, basically had to mind-read as to this pervert's intent and forecast what would have happened if he hadn't been stopped. The questions where we could not agree were: 1) Were his actual sexual in nature? and 2) And was his intent rape?

In the end, we convicted on forcible touching only. I felt the acts were inherently sexual, but the loudest voices in the room were 100% against that because he touched these young girls' breasts and buttocks only. In the end, I caved in order to convict on something. I didn't feel like we could convict on attempted rape; there wasn't enough evidence clearly showing his intent was to go that far. But I think the prosecutors were right to bring the charge, and as a citizen I'm glad they did. Hopefully those young girls got some justice.

I imagine the Mangione case will have similar deliberations on terrorism. What was his intent? Can we be sure beyond a reasonable doubt that it was terrorism? Right now, I'd say no, but I think the charge is legit and I'm keeping an open mind.
 
You have got to be kidding me. I'd love to hear the argument that touching someone's breasts and buttocks is not sexual in nature.
The argument I always see is that breasts and butts don't make babies and therefore are not sexual organs.

Which is true but they are sensual so touching them is foreplay. Therefore, @Private Citizen's fellow jury members are morons. At best.
 
Not to derail the thread, but the New York definition of sexual assault requires proof that the touching was purposely done for sexual arousal / gratification. For me, the areas he touched were proof enough. My fellow jurors all disagreed and felt the prosecution had not proven that the perp’s touching was for arousal. He didn’t testify, but his defense attorney claimed he had a low IQ, was socially awkward and acted much younger than he was, and was roughhousing with these underage girls. Yeah, right. At least we convicted on something.
 
Not to derail the thread, but the New York definition of sexual assault requires proof that the touching was purposely done for sexual arousal / gratification. For me, the areas he touched were proof enough. My fellow jurors all disagreed and felt the prosecution had not proven that the perp’s touching was for arousal. He didn’t testify, but his defense attorney claimed he had a low IQ, was socially awkward and acted much younger than he was, and was roughhousing with these underage girls. Yeah, right. At least we convicted on something.
Morons. If he had touched other areas too, you might be able to make that claim. But only those? Yeah, what else could it be? Nobody roughhouses by touching someone's breasts.

Anyway, I came to post this:


Apparently, this team thinks the terrorism charge is a stretch and was only done so they could also charge with Murder 1 instead of Murder 2.
 
If that is the definition then rape wouldn't be either

Rape is about power not sexual arousal.
 
I wonder if the fact that there was a manifesto of sorts contributed to the terrorism charges. I could imagine that might escalate the charges. I have not read the manifesto, just pondering.
The manifesto and the notebook provide the base for the charges, but I doubt the DA and Feds would have bothered had there not been the public vitriol toward UHC and the other insurers. Luigi would still get 25 to Life for 2nd degree murder. The new charges greatly complicate the case. But the message is sent that anyone else who copycats will have all the books thrown at them.
 
The Free Press has a piece by a journalist who corresponded with Luigi Mangione. Mangione's emails to him were among his last known online communications. Lots of interesting takeaways in here, including the flawed analysis of Mangione and those who celebrate him.


[Mangione] was warm and gregarious from the outset, praising my writing and telling me how excited he was to speak with me. Mangione said he was on holiday in Japan, and I asked him about it. He said that while he loved many aspects of Japanese culture, such as its sense of honor, he believed Japan was full of “NPCs,” or non-player characters—which is internet slang for people who don’t think for themselves. He then told me a story he’d first mentioned in an email: One morning in Japan, he saw a man having a seizure in the street, so he ran to the nearest police station for help. They followed him back to the man, but refused to cross any street if the stoplight was red—even if the road was empty—as the man was seizing on the ground. Mangione lamented what he called “a lack of free will” in Japan, by which he meant a lack of agency.

I quickly realized that agency was a major concern of Mangione’s. He identified three of my articles that particularly resonated with him, all of which describe threats to human autonomy.


[...]

Unlike most people who decry others as “NPCs,” Mangione showed enough awareness to identify that he, too, lived much of his life on autopilot, confessing that he sometimes wasted whole afternoons doomscrolling social media. He said he wanted to regain some of the agency he felt he’d lost to online distractions, so we spent much of the chat discussing ways he could become more active.

[...]

Besides Kaczynski, Mangione’s intellectual tastes were relatively normal. Writers he spoke fondly of included Tim Urban, Sam Harris, Yuval Noah Harari, Jonathan Haidt, and Aldous Huxley. His political views were less conventional; when I asked him if he was voting in the presidential election, he scrunched his nose and said he wasn’t crazy about Donald Trump or Joe Biden, but liked some of the things Robert F. Kennedy Jr. was saying.

[...]

Somehow, from there we ended up talking about intergenerational trauma, and it was here that we had our only significant disagreement. Mangione implied that he believed trauma could be directly inherited, and that it accumulated in families much like generational wealth. He claimed to have based this view partly on his own personal experiences. (I can’t elaborate.) It sounded to me like he was describing a pseudoscientific misinterpretation of epigenetics, popularized by activist-academics and books like The Body Keeps the Score.

The idea that trauma is passed down epigenetically is not only unscientific, it’s also un-agentic; if you believe your trauma is hardwired into your DNA, you’re prone to passively accept it rather than actively trying to overcome it. And so, in a bid to increase Mangione’s agency, I pointed out, as politely as I could, why he was wrong.


[...]

[T]o me, Mangione seemed like a particularly nice guy[...] he showed a desire to help even people he didn’t know, frequently expressing concerns about humanity generally, and wishing to find ways to improve everyone’s lives. He viewed most people as NPCs who needed to be awakened, but he never came off as arrogant, regarding himself as equally zombielike in many of his thoughts and behaviors. His view of society was somewhat pessimistic, but he tempered it with a sense of humor and a focus on finding solutions rather than merely complaining. And although he seemed to have some unscientific views, he was always open to other viewpoints, and was willing to update his beliefs if corrected.

[...]

[W]hile thousands reacted with laughter emojis to Thompson’s murder, and with love-heart emojis to his alleged murderer, I was sickened. Vigilantism is always wrong. If you celebrate someone gunning down a defenseless person in the street, then you advocate for a world in which this is an acceptable thing for anyone to do. You, in fact, advocate for a world in which a stranger can decide that you’re also a bad person, and gun you down in the street. In such a world, I promise you, your health insurance would cost much more.

[...]

[W]hen Mangione was revealed as the suspect, everything became surreal. My mind raced back to our chat, searching for clues that he could’ve done this. The only thing that stuck out was when Mangione briefly mentioned healthcare in the U.S. was expensive, he also said we Britons were lucky to have a socialized National Health Service. But even this statement, by itself, gave no indication that Mangione was capable of what he was being accused of.

When someone is found to have committed murder, friends and relatives will usually say things like, “I can’t believe it, he seemed like such a nice guy.” I instinctively said the same thing about Mangione. But as the shock faded and my wits returned, I ceased to be surprised. I’ve long known that people who are capable of great kindness also tend to be capable of great cruelty, because both extremes are often animated by the same crazed impulsivity. It’s why many of the people celebrating the murder are those who self-identify as “compassionate” leftists. And it’s why most of history’s greatest evils were committed by people who thought they were doing good.

Much more puzzling than the cruelty was the stupidity. Mangione had seemed intelligent, far too intelligent to do something so dumb. Sure, smart people are better able to rationalize stupid actions and beliefs, but Mangione’s alleged rationalization, given in a 262-word “minifesto,” was nowhere near the intellectual standard I would’ve expected of him.

The data blogger Cremieux Recueil dismantles the minifesto line by line, but, to give an example, it claims “the U.S. has the #1 most expensive healthcare system in the world, yet we rank roughly #42 in life expectancy,” ignoring the fact that the U.S.’s healthcare costs are broadly in line with its income level, and its life expectancy has little to do with health insurance and much more to do with Americans being disproportionately obese, violent, and drug-addicted. Further, the minifesto makes basic factual errors[...]

Not only was the justification for the targeting of Thompson stupid, but the targeting itself was stupid. While it’s true that UnitedHealthcare has the highest denial rate for medical claims, the CEO doesn’t set the approval rate of a health insurance company’s payouts—that’s done by the actuaries, who themselves are constrained by various considerations, such as the need to keep costs low, including for policyholders. But even if Thompson did have carte blanche to set his company’s approval rates, it wouldn’t have made a big difference.

Health insurance companies don’t get rich by denying payouts for claims. As the economics blogger Noah Smith points out, UnitedHealthcare’s net profit margin is just 6.11 percent, which is only about half of the average profit margin of companies in the S&P 500. If UnitedHealth Group decided to donate every single dollar of its profit to buying Americans more healthcare, it would only be able to pay for about 9.3 percent more healthcare than it’s already paying for.

[...]

The ultimate point here is that Thompson was not the problem. He was a normal, flawed guy trying to keep costs low both for his company and his policyholders, while keeping his fiduciary duty to shareholders, whose investment his company depended on. He was a cog in a vast and unfair system that’s controlled by no single person but by the cumulative actions of millions of people operating in their own immediate interests. Kaczynski called such decentralized problems “self-propagating systems,” recognizing that they weren’t the result of human coordination, but rather, a lack of it.

If Kaczynski’s bombs and book-length manifesto couldn’t destroy such a system, then Mangione’s alleged 3D-printed pistol and shoddy minifesto certainly won’t. You can’t kill your way out of a problem that’s ultimately no one’s fault.

Still, people allocate agency strategically, to assign praise to allies and blame to enemies. Mangione’s supporters misattribute total agency to Thompson, so they can scapegoat him for a societal problem he had little control over. Meanwhile, they deny all agency to Mangione, claiming he was pushed to do what he allegedly did by a corrupt system or simple back pain.


[...]

I don’t know if Mangione ever found the agency he was searching for. If he didn’t, I hope he gets the help he needs. And if he did, he will soon discover that the price of agency is culpability.
 
The Free Press has a piece by a journalist who corresponded with Luigi Mangione. Mangione's emails to him were among his last known online communications. Lots of interesting takeaways in here, including the flawed analysis of Mangione and those who celebrate him.


[Mangione] was warm and gregarious from the outset, praising my writing and telling me how excited he was to speak with me. Mangione said he was on holiday in Japan, and I asked him about it. He said that while he loved many aspects of Japanese culture, such as its sense of honor, he believed Japan was full of “NPCs,” or non-player characters—which is internet slang for people who don’t think for themselves. He then told me a story he’d first mentioned in an email: One morning in Japan, he saw a man having a seizure in the street, so he ran to the nearest police station for help. They followed him back to the man, but refused to cross any street if the stoplight was red—even if the road was empty—as the man was seizing on the ground. Mangione lamented what he called “a lack of free will” in Japan, by which he meant a lack of agency.

I quickly realized that agency was a major concern of Mangione’s. He identified three of my articles that particularly resonated with him, all of which describe threats to human autonomy.


[...]

Unlike most people who decry others as “NPCs,” Mangione showed enough awareness to identify that he, too, lived much of his life on autopilot, confessing that he sometimes wasted whole afternoons doomscrolling social media. He said he wanted to regain some of the agency he felt he’d lost to online distractions, so we spent much of the chat discussing ways he could become more active.

[...]

Besides Kaczynski, Mangione’s intellectual tastes were relatively normal. Writers he spoke fondly of included Tim Urban, Sam Harris, Yuval Noah Harari, Jonathan Haidt, and Aldous Huxley. His political views were less conventional; when I asked him if he was voting in the presidential election, he scrunched his nose and said he wasn’t crazy about Donald Trump or Joe Biden, but liked some of the things Robert F. Kennedy Jr. was saying.

[...]

Somehow, from there we ended up talking about intergenerational trauma, and it was here that we had our only significant disagreement. Mangione implied that he believed trauma could be directly inherited, and that it accumulated in families much like generational wealth. He claimed to have based this view partly on his own personal experiences. (I can’t elaborate.) It sounded to me like he was describing a pseudoscientific misinterpretation of epigenetics, popularized by activist-academics and books like The Body Keeps the Score.

The idea that trauma is passed down epigenetically is not only unscientific, it’s also un-agentic; if you believe your trauma is hardwired into your DNA, you’re prone to passively accept it rather than actively trying to overcome it. And so, in a bid to increase Mangione’s agency, I pointed out, as politely as I could, why he was wrong.


[...]

[T]o me, Mangione seemed like a particularly nice guy[...] he showed a desire to help even people he didn’t know, frequently expressing concerns about humanity generally, and wishing to find ways to improve everyone’s lives. He viewed most people as NPCs who needed to be awakened, but he never came off as arrogant, regarding himself as equally zombielike in many of his thoughts and behaviors. His view of society was somewhat pessimistic, but he tempered it with a sense of humor and a focus on finding solutions rather than merely complaining. And although he seemed to have some unscientific views, he was always open to other viewpoints, and was willing to update his beliefs if corrected.

[...]

[W]hile thousands reacted with laughter emojis to Thompson’s murder, and with love-heart emojis to his alleged murderer, I was sickened. Vigilantism is always wrong. If you celebrate someone gunning down a defenseless person in the street, then you advocate for a world in which this is an acceptable thing for anyone to do. You, in fact, advocate for a world in which a stranger can decide that you’re also a bad person, and gun you down in the street. In such a world, I promise you, your health insurance would cost much more.

[...]

[W]hen Mangione was revealed as the suspect, everything became surreal. My mind raced back to our chat, searching for clues that he could’ve done this. The only thing that stuck out was when Mangione briefly mentioned healthcare in the U.S. was expensive, he also said we Britons were lucky to have a socialized National Health Service. But even this statement, by itself, gave no indication that Mangione was capable of what he was being accused of.

When someone is found to have committed murder, friends and relatives will usually say things like, “I can’t believe it, he seemed like such a nice guy.” I instinctively said the same thing about Mangione. But as the shock faded and my wits returned, I ceased to be surprised. I’ve long known that people who are capable of great kindness also tend to be capable of great cruelty, because both extremes are often animated by the same crazed impulsivity. It’s why many of the people celebrating the murder are those who self-identify as “compassionate” leftists. And it’s why most of history’s greatest evils were committed by people who thought they were doing good.

Much more puzzling than the cruelty was the stupidity. Mangione had seemed intelligent, far too intelligent to do something so dumb. Sure, smart people are better able to rationalize stupid actions and beliefs, but Mangione’s alleged rationalization, given in a 262-word “minifesto,” was nowhere near the intellectual standard I would’ve expected of him.

The data blogger Cremieux Recueil dismantles the minifesto line by line, but, to give an example, it claims “the U.S. has the #1 most expensive healthcare system in the world, yet we rank roughly #42 in life expectancy,” ignoring the fact that the U.S.’s healthcare costs are broadly in line with its income level, and its life expectancy has little to do with health insurance and much more to do with Americans being disproportionately obese, violent, and drug-addicted. Further, the minifesto makes basic factual errors[...]

Not only was the justification for the targeting of Thompson stupid, but the targeting itself was stupid. While it’s true that UnitedHealthcare has the highest denial rate for medical claims, the CEO doesn’t set the approval rate of a health insurance company’s payouts—that’s done by the actuaries, who themselves are constrained by various considerations, such as the need to keep costs low, including for policyholders. But even if Thompson did have carte blanche to set his company’s approval rates, it wouldn’t have made a big difference.

Health insurance companies don’t get rich by denying payouts for claims. As the economics blogger Noah Smith points out, UnitedHealthcare’s net profit margin is just 6.11 percent, which is only about half of the average profit margin of companies in the S&P 500. If UnitedHealth Group decided to donate every single dollar of its profit to buying Americans more healthcare, it would only be able to pay for about 9.3 percent more healthcare than it’s already paying for.


[...]

The ultimate point here is that Thompson was not the problem. He was a normal, flawed guy trying to keep costs low both for his company and his policyholders, while keeping his fiduciary duty to shareholders, whose investment his company depended on. He was a cog in a vast and unfair system that’s controlled by no single person but by the cumulative actions of millions of people operating in their own immediate interests. Kaczynski called such decentralized problems “self-propagating systems,” recognizing that they weren’t the result of human coordination, but rather, a lack of it.

If Kaczynski’s bombs and book-length manifesto couldn’t destroy such a system, then Mangione’s alleged 3D-printed pistol and shoddy minifesto certainly won’t. You can’t kill your way out of a problem that’s ultimately no one’s fault.

Still, people allocate agency strategically, to assign praise to allies and blame to enemies. Mangione’s supporters misattribute total agency to Thompson, so they can scapegoat him for a societal problem he had little control over. Meanwhile, they deny all agency to Mangione, claiming he was pushed to do what he allegedly did by a corrupt system or simple back pain.


[...]

I don’t know if Mangione ever found the agency he was searching for. If he didn’t, I hope he gets the help he needs. And if he did, he will soon discover that the price of agency is culpability.
Didn't Thompson make $10 million a year and exercise more than $20 million in stock options in 2024? At that salary he most certainly was aware of, and responsible for, the percentage of claims that were denied. Moreover, it is really unconscionable that a health care executive was paid that kind of salary. Health care should not be for profit, and executives should not be making that kind of money, if for no other reason that the optics that they are profiting off the suffering of their clients (which they are). I find this journalist's analysis very deterministic and in line with some recent populist notions of human beings lacking any free will. Determinism seems to lead to fatalism which in turn exonerates all those "cogs in the system" who make millions of dollars a year, but are ostensibly not responsible for their actions.
 
Didn't Thompson make $10 million a year and exercise more than $20 million in stock options in 2024? At that salary he most certainly was aware of, and responsible for, the percentage of claims that were denied. Moreover, it is really unconscionable that a health care executive was paid that kind of salary. Health care should not be for profit, and executives should not be making that kind of money, if for no other reason that the optics that they are profiting off the suffering of their clients (which they are). I find this journalist's analysis very deterministic and in line with some recent populist notions of human beings lacking any free will. Determinism seems to lead to fatalism which in turn exonerates all those "cogs in the system" who make millions of dollars a year, but are ostensibly not responsible for their actions.
Something the article ignores is that other employees quit rather than be part of these unethical business practices. But Thompson did not.
 
Didn't Thompson make $10 million a year and exercise more than $20 million in stock options in 2024?

So did plenty of other CEOs. If we disagree with social media companies or oil companies or fast fashion companies, can we declare their CEOs - who have broken no laws - immoral and celebrate vigilate justice done to them, too? (It wouldn’t surprise me if people say yes to this one, scarily enough.)

At that salary he most certainly was aware of, and responsible for, the percentage of claims that were denied.

What is the salary cutoff to be subjected to vigilante justice, despite having been convicted of no crime? If you earn more than X, anyone with different morals can kill you and use that as an excuse?

Moreover, it is really unconscionable that a health care executive was paid that kind of salary. Health care should not be for profit, and executives should not be making that kind of money, if for no other reason that the optics that they are profiting off the suffering of their clients (which they are).

Despite your opinions, these things are absolutely legal in the USA. What’s unconscionable to you is not unconscionable to others. The morality arguments are the same ones used by jihadists, gay bashers, abortion doctor killers, Nazis, Putin, etc. I don’t know anyone who believes that they personally are immoral or that their morals are wrong.

Where laws do not align with morals, change the laws via the democratic process. Any other approach opens you up to the same violence when someone decides they don’t like your morals.
 
1. There is no valid excuse for killing Thompson.
2. There is no reason to believe that Thompson was not fully aware, supportive, and likely pushing for reasons for UHC to deny or delay coverage.

The real issue with healthcare in the US is political & regulatory capture, with those who benefit from it funneling big bucks as campaign donors to politicians.
 
So did plenty of other CEOs. If we disagree with social media companies or oil companies or fast fashion companies, can we declare their CEOs - who have broken no laws - immoral and celebrate vigilate justice done to them, too? (It wouldn’t surprise me if people say yes to this one, scarily enough.)



What is the salary cutoff to be subjected to vigilante justice, despite having been convicted of no crime? If you earn more than X, anyone with different morals can kill you and use that as an excuse?



Despite your opinions, these things are absolutely legal in the USA. What’s unconscionable to you is not unconscionable to others. The morality arguments are the same ones used by jihadists, gay bashers, abortion doctor killers, Nazis, Putin, etc. I don’t know anyone who believes that they personally are immoral or that their morals are wrong.

Where laws do not align with morals, change the laws via the democratic process. Any other approach opens you up to the same violence when someone decides they don’t like your morals.
I wasn't addressing the vigilante justice element. It was the journalist's exoneration of Thompson as a "cog in the system," unable to exercise agency, that bothered me. It looked like he was letting him off the hook entirely with his weird deterministic world view.

And your belief that to have morals is problematic, because others have exercised nefarious deeds that are based on a different set of morals, falls along similar lines. The issue is not to eschew morals, but to debate them. Without morals, we would still have slavery and child labour, in those places it has been eradicated. And the journalist's belief that those who exercise great kindness are also likely to be most cruel, was particularly odd, almost Machiavellian, I would argue.

It is weird seeing people pretzel themselves philosophically to justify corporate greed. The philosophies need to be questioned, along with the greed.

It is possible to condemn Thompson's ethics without endorsing vigilante justice.
 

Users who are viewing this thread

Back
Top
Do Not Sell My Personal Information