It appears that in every thread about this event there is someone calling everyone else in the thread sick and twisted for not proclaiming that all lives are sacred and being for the death of one individual.

It really is a real life trolley problem because those individuals are not seeing the deaths caused by the insurance industry and not realizing that sitting back and doing nothing (i.e. not pulling the lever on the train track switch) doesn’t save lives…people are going to continue to die if nothing is done.

Taking a moral high ground and stating that all lives matter is still going to costs lives and instead of it being a few CEOs it will be thousands.

  • chicken@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    7 days ago

    I’m pointing out that the usual and straightforward result of threatening punishment is that people stop doing the activity (or at least rethink it).

    The idea that punishment works is for the most part an authoritarian fantasy, not reality, and this is backed by both research into individual behavior and collective behavior.

    I wonder why insurance companies in the rest of the world can survive without fucking their customers over?

    Probably because the insurance companies they compete with are bound by the same (specific, predictable, law-based) rules prohibiting that behavior. Probably not because they are afraid of angry customers with guns.

    • AwesomeLowlander@sh.itjust.works
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      7 days ago

      The idea that punishment works is for the most part an authoritarian fantasy, not reality

      The idea that punishment works is the concept behind our entire justice system, and most of society.

      Probably because the insurance companies they compete with are bound by the same (specific, predictable, law-based) rules prohibiting that behavior. Probably not because they are afraid of angry customers with guns.

      You seem to have missed the point. You claimed that ‘the risk factor is simply working in that industry at all’. I’m pointing out that the industry does not inherently have any risk factor, and it’s entirely possible to be in the industry without murdering tens of thousands of people. The rest of the world manages to do it. The risk factor would be deciding to screw your customers over.

      • chicken@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        7 days ago

        The idea that punishment works is the concept behind our entire justice system

        It’s one of the concepts, and that’s a big part of why we have so much evidence against it.

        • AwesomeLowlander@sh.itjust.works
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          7 days ago

          On a quick google:

          The certainty of being caught is a vastly more powerful deterrent than the punishment. Research shows clearly: If criminals think there’s only a slim chance they will be caught, the severity of punishment — even draconian punishment — is an ineffective deterrent to crime

          So the more executions, the more effective it is?

          • chicken@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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            7 days ago

            Sounds right, but again with the caveat, what are they being caught for? Being a healthcare executive at all? Some vaguely defined moral threshhold? What is it they are being taught to fear, and how disconnected is that from any actual intention? Like beating a dog to try to get it to stop destroying your furniture. And then consider that certain punishment for them isn’t actually realistic unless it’s the government imposing it. Vigilantes can’t get them all or probably even many of them.

            • AwesomeLowlander@sh.itjust.works
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              7 days ago

              If anything, China and Russia have shown that having unclear laws and lines are far more effective than clear-cut rules, because when you don’t know where the line is, you self-police to a degree more than the state would otherwise do. It doesn’t work on dogs because they aren’t intelligent enough to understand. It DOES work on humans because we get it.

              Vigilantes can’t get them all or probably even many of them.

              That would depend on how popular a movement it becomes, hmm? It certainly worked for the IRA.