By Ned Barrett in The American Thinker
Here is an unintentional consequence of Luigi Mangione’s assassination murder of the CEO of United Healthcare in the streets of Manhattan.
There will be a quick rush of CEOs demanding – and getting – teams of bodyguards.
They will think – not without a certain logic – as the fan base of Mangione groupies will likely spawn at least a few other Mangione clones. These sick sycophants will seek their own brand of “justice” against some aggrieved corporation. If it can happen to a health insurance CEO – the others in that industry will swiftly move to get the best security guards money can buy. They will rightly see themselves as targets, because a lot of people hate insurance companies.
But soon it will spread.
Having security guards will be justified as a necessary perk for CEOs, not just at health insurance companies, but at all companies – including those who don’t normally attract a lot of hatred.
But where do you draw the line?
And, with the example of Mangione, who can say that, “no, our CEO isn’t a target.” What Board would take the risk, since even an expensive security team is barely a rounding error on major corporations’ balance sheets?
But soon – and amazingly soon – having a security team will be seen as a status symbol for CEOs, starting with massive companies like United Healthcare, then very large corporations, then just large corporations.
How far down this will go is anybody’s guess, but it will happen, and quickly. It may have already begun, though if so, it’s not happening enough to be seen as a trend. Not yet, but soon.
Then this process will be repeated for really large non-for-profit organizations. You may recall that, after 911, the Red Cross was found to be taking all the many donations they received to channel on to families who lost someone when the twin towers fell. All Americans – or so it seemed – wanted to help. I saw groups of young people holding bake sales in the Kroger parking lot, raising money to send to the families, but who would know them but the Red Cross. Right.
Well, it turned out that the Red Cross had a massive slush fund already in place for massive disasters, so their CEO decided to direct the donations into building up an even larger organizational slush fund.
CEO Dr. Bernadine Healy, president since 1999, appealed nationally for donations to help survivors and the families of those killed. In short order, they raised $543 million. The Red Cross had promised that all of those funds would be go to the victims’ families. However, the Red Cross – a Congressional hearing later uncovered – held back two thirds of those funds for other Red Cross “needs.”
Healy was forced to resign – once Congress had uncovered such a massive cover-up. Her replacement, not wanting to be tarred with that same brush, made good on the $543 million donated to the families – years before. Does “a day late and a dollar short” mean anything?
As someone who was horrified by 9/11, I assumed that the funds raised by kids’ bake sales and church collections and thousands other ways that people contributed to the Red Cross, confident that the funds would get to the victims – and fast, when they’d need it most. And like those millions of people who “did their part,” when I heard what the Red Cross did, I felt betrayed and never gave to them again, even though I worked in the healthcare field and knew that they managed the nation’s largest blood bank.
Some of those betrayed people, Mangione-style, might feel that the Red Cross president, twenty-five years after 9/11, might make a good target. So they will – or should be – among the first non-profit to get a security guard team for their CEO. This – or something like it, will lead to the same process in the non-profit world as I predict will happen in the for-profit world.
For some – like the Red Cross – they have real sins that might only be exonerated by death, at least in the whacked-out mind of Mangione-clones. There are many unsavory non-profits which spawn anger, but what can you do? Now the nut-cases know – they have a role model.
But they won’t be the only ones who will soon get security guards. The next group will do so at government expense. Some, such as Kamala Harris in her days as a California Senator, already have, having illegally dragooned the Los Angeles Police Department into that role for prestige purposes.
In our heated election cycle, with Trump supporters being cast out of liberal families, and – I imagine, the reverse happening as well, though the media hasn’t covered it – will soon suggest to members of Congress that they aren’t all that well-respected by large sections of the public.
Including, to be sure, some proto-Mangiones out there. However, unable to go to the Board Chair for relief, they can just vote themselves tidy personal security programs, and by paying top dollar, they could assume to get the best in the market. They wouldn’t be wrong.
But here’s where a supply-and-demand problem will arise. There are only so many professional bodyguards currently working in America – presumably enough to meet the demand, with perhaps a few extra who are “between positions.”
However, suddenly, almost overnight, the demand for professional bodyguards will vastly outdistance the supply.
Salaries will – law of supply and demand – skyrocket.
The highest bidders – Congress, the very largest corporations, and a few of the largest and most unpopular non-profits, like the Red Cross – will pay whatever it takes to get the best.
At some point, fairly early into this radical transformation of a fairly small “industry,” the supply will be exhausted. But with demand growing, not stabilizing, the rest of the security guards will be large men – pug-uglies who look intimidating in suits while not having a clue what it takes to be a real security guard.
Would such a guard deter Mangione? Unlikely, and since he struck from behind, while amateur security guards will almost certainly look toward where they’re going instead of where they’ve been, very unlikely. Other motivated proto-Mangiones will mostly get through, ironically creating an even greater demand for security guards, driving up prices for not just the best, but with all the rest, too.
I am not a Nostradamus, but my career has been largely focused on identifying trends ahead of the completion, and because I worked in the hospital field, anyone with an unsatisfactory outcome might decide he now knows how he can “complain” to about a bad outcome or an outrageous hospital bill.
So yes, I think this can, and most likely will, happen, and quickly. If I was the CEO of another very large insurance company – and aren’t they all? – I’d have already started the process. I don’t want to die just because someone had a grudge against my company. Would you?
Ned Barnett, a frequent contributor to American Thinker dating back to 2006, spent his career in the hospital side of healthcare for more than 25 years, and used that experience to write his first ten books. He now works with other authors, helping them to write their books as a ghostwriter, or helping them to market, promote and sell their books. His next book for authors is Write Now! How to Market, Promote and Sell Your Book. It’s scheduled to come out in 2025. Ned can be reached at nedbarnett51@gmail.com or 702-561-1167.
Reader Comments:
Martha Troyer
I agree with the author. I lay the blame on Democrat Policies, like the Affordable Care Act.
I discussed the sorry plight of Health Care with a young Nurse raised during the catastrophic aftermath of the AFA. She hopes for a Health Care system similar to Canada's. I stopped discussing her opinions and sharing my opinions. The Nurse had "researched" health care after WWii. She never mentioned the AFA and how it made health care so expensive and less attractive to private doctors.
It is the AFA that brought about the murder of the United Health Care CEO. Insurance leaders/lobbyists supported the AFA. It was a cash cow and limited competition in the medical/insurance playing field. The author is correct. Government bureaucracies create simmering hatred by uninformed citizens. Media stirs the pot.
Nutherguy
You are correct. The ACA dramatically accelerated the trend to 'somebody else pays' routine care and provided the first essential dose of 'but somebody else decides what care you can have' at the same time.
We are getting exactly what our Congress voted for. And if your nurse acquaintance gets what she wants we will go on to even more expensive care and to 'free' assisted suicide and euthanasia ... just this morning I think one of the headlines is that's now the cause of 5% of deaths in Canada.
If it's free and to a great extent even if there's no competition then euthanasia is the only answer because individual health consumers have no incentive (and often almost no way) to economize on care.
John The Deplorable
And if your nurse acquaintance gets what she wants we will go on to even more expensive care . . .
And long waiting lines. There's a reason that Canadians who can afford it come to the USA for medical services.
Diana Connan Forgy
Yesterday's Babylon Bee had a piece featuring a worried-looking Obama saying, "'Now Now, Let's Not Be So Hasty To Find And Assassinate Everyone Responsible For The Healthcare Crisis,' Says Nervous Obama". He would be very nervous about this if he had the slightest amount of self-awareness, but he would probably never realize that the face he sees in the mirror is the man most responsible for our struggling healthcare system.
chuck
As more and more comes out about Mangione and the murder, there doesn't seem to be any connection between him and the CEO that caused his misery other than being a prominent figure. Totally useless waste of a human life that only a leftist could love.
Diana Connan Forgy
Mangione looks quite mad, in addition to arrogant and obnoxious. One has to wonder if he suffers from some mental illness -- or rather, if everyone around him suffers from it. He'll probably get off with a sentence to a hospital for the criminally insane and will talk his way out of it in no time.
Nutherguy
Well, he made a ton of money while he was alive so I'm sure his family thought he was useful.
chuck
After reading my paragraph I was totally unclear. My point was only a leftist would love the useless murder of the CEO.
John The Deplorablecchuck
I saw your original meaning.
Bob Wilson
Well, simple solution to the bodyguard shortage...hire all those illegal aliens...the Left will tell Trump that there are not enough Americans available to do the job.
Diana Connan Forgy
Things never change. In ancient Rome people of some but not great prominence -- businesses men, for example -- would hire gladiators to escort them around. Were the gladiators competent as bodyguards? Not if you compare them with the Emperor's praetorian guard, but they were probably intimidating to the average street thug, at least.
DAVID J CASTELLI
I can see more BS lies from wall st coming next Quarter. We missed our bottom line because our security costs went up 50 million $.........
Nutherguy
I'd bet on the CEOs of the NGOs that have been supporting, flying in and distributing the illegal migrants. These companies have been under the radar but they are known and they make very good money from our tax dollars.
John The Deplorable
The Left, with its Defund the Police movement wants to go to various community services.
Plenty of people there. What could go wrong?
Patricia Kunz
Let the left focus on services. Defund the Police policies could spur trained police officers to join the private sector, as bodyguards. Soon those cities won't have a police department at all. And the former officers will be well-paid in their new field.
John The Deplorable
Especially if the departing are eligible for a pension.
Nutherguy
Yep ... That's the downstream from dramatic increases in the demand for private security services.
donald b welch
subway riders also as they begin to realize that men aren't as stupid as they have been lead to believe. buck up ladies.
gafferguy
Hey Ned, yeah, youse gonna need a bodyguard. Lotsa folks out there can't stand blather. Keep it up.
Sean Hannity mentioned a recent case from Canada's horrendous health care system that shows why Canadaians who have the money to do so often come to the US for medical care.
A 60 year old woman needed a knee replacement, a common and routine surgery in the US which can be scheduled in a matter of weeks. In Canada, she had a six YEAR waiting list during which her condition deteriorated and she suffered considerably increased pain. She finally got her surgery, but she had to be transfered to another facility to have the wound from the surgery closed and that facility had no beds available. She had to wait EIGHT DAYS with an open wound before a bed opened to have it closed. By then, her flesh had started dying. She had to have the leg amputated. That is how government run health care works, and it is a very evil system. CAnada and the UK are the same. Waiting lists kill and also cause other adverse health outcomes. |
Same lame argument.
No system is perfect but, a for profit health care model doesn't work for sick people. Everyone knows that but we can't agree on reform. |
Comrade Bobbie is going full socialist on us on healthcare. Is that any surprise?
Socialized medicine kills with its lengthy waiting lists. In the UK, most doctors in the socialized National Health Service get private medical insurance so that they can get good and timely care in the parallel private health system because they know first hand how bad the socialized system is. Australia has a similar parallel system, but Canada does not, leading many Canadians to seek decent and timely medical care in the US. I remember an article a couple of years ago in one of the British newspaper about three men all diagnosed about the same time with the same type of cancer at the same stage. One mortgaged his house and paid cash through a private hospital in the UK. He was cured. Another went abroad (India or Turkey if memory serves) to get treatment at a much cheaper cost. He was cured. The third waited his turn on the National Health Service waiting list. When they got to him, his results showed the cancer had progressed too far and was inoperable. He died. That is how waiting lists kill in socialized medicine. |
And those without employer policies got major treatment at tax payer expense in the ER, then went bankrupt. If they lived.
The only payer , the tax payer. I say cut out the middle man stealing all our money. Medical care is a right, not a privilege for the wealthy. |
Prior to Obmmacare, employer based health insurance was written for all employees of each company, and those denial rates on claims were still 1% to 2%.
As far as actualial tables and individual insurance, that is a matter of fairness to customers. Consider life insurance; should a person 30 years old in good health pay the same rates as someone 60 years old with cancer? Or auto insurance; should someone with no driving convictions pay the same auto insurance rates as someone with a string of DWI's and speeding tickets? Of course NOT. |
That's because they denied you the policy. Now they have to write the policy to be compliant, but deny you at every turn.
Death by 1000 cuts is still gonna hurt. It wasn't too hard to crack that code |
Before Obamacare, insurance denials were exceedingly rare, between 1% and 2% of claims, and that was even true of United Healthcare, which now has a 31% denial rate. Obamacare did a lot of negative things to health care, and driving many insurance companies out of the health insurance business was one of them. Consumers now suffer from the lack of competition caused by Obamacare. But that was all by design. Obamacare was intended by its creators to gum up health care to the point that the public would buy socialized medicine, which is even worse.
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Let us know what you think after becoming medically bankrupt. Every thing you worked for gone. Most of us are just one major diagnosis away. You have a policy, but they can deny any part of it at any time. Just when you need it.
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What is the generic symbol of healthcare?; The caduceus
What is the caduceus?; Not what they tell you. -And the people spake against God, and against Moses, Wherefore have ye brought us up out of Egypt to die in the wilderness? for there is no bread, neither is there any water; and our soul loatheth this light bread. And the Lord sent fiery serpents among the people, and they bit the people; and much people of Israel died. Therefore the people came to Moses, and said, We have sinned, for we have spoken against the Lord, and against thee; pray unto the Lord, that he take away the serpents from us. And Moses prayed for the people. And the Lord said unto Moses, Make thee a fiery serpent, and set it upon a pole: and it shall come to pass, that every one that is bitten, when he looketh upon it, shall live. And Moses made a serpent of brass, and put it upon a pole, and it came to pass, that if a serpent had bitten any man, when he beheld the serpent of brass, he lived. “If I have told you earthly things, and ye believe not, how shall ye believe, if I tell you of heavenly things? And no man hath ascended up to heaven, but he that came down from heaven, even the Son of man which is in heaven. And as Moses lifted up the serpent in the wilderness, even so must the Son of man be lifted up: That whosoever believeth in him should not perish, but have eternal life.“ No medical professional, hospital, or copious amount of insurance are able to save anyone. If we are to suffer in the flesh, it is written we are blessed. As Christ suffered, so too shall we. The servant is not greater than the master. It is for our own sake, said the Lord, that the garden brings forth thorns. |
WHile Obamacare had some similarities to Romneycare, it actually was a tweaking of Hillarycare. All of these socialized medicine halfway houses are a nightmare. Romneycare is a huge reason Mitt Romney should NEVER have been a GOP nominee.
Another huge factor in Obamacare getting off the ground is that the pro-China traitor Mitch McConnell refused to fight it in the Senate. McConnell, as usual, was prostituting his office to special interests instead of representing Republican voters. And Little Bobbie has totally misrepresented his earlier post, which can easily be seen by scrolling down to it. |
Didn't Obamacare actually come from Romneycare?
A Neo-Con is no different than a radical leftist when you get down to it. |
Biden regime spent $1 Billion taxpayer dollars promoting radical DEI in schools | Editorials, Beaufort Observer, Op-Ed & Politics | "woke" Google goes full Bud Lite in new woke ad |
Bahahahahahahahahaha hahahaha
I think I broke a tooth