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SHAPIRO: CEO's targeted shooting death signals devils are here

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This week, a deranged anti-capitalist allegedly shot to death the CEO of UnitedHealthcare, Brian Thompson, on the streets of New York.

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The alleged shooter carried a manifesto with him, decrying the nature of America’s health-care system: “Frankly, these parasites simply had it coming.”

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The manifesto claimed America spends more than any other country on health care and yet “we rank roughly #42 in life expectancy,” due to insurance companies that “continue to abuse our country for immense profit because the American public has allowed them to get away with it. Obviously, the problem is more complex, but I do not have space, and frankly, I do not pretend to be the most qualified person to lay out the full argument.”

It is generally useless to argue with the criminally insane — and the alleged shooter in this case appears to have experienced a mental break months ago due to drug abuse and severe chronic back pain — but the problem is that the shooter’s view has become shockingly common. Many Americans believe American health care is uniquely deficient; far more disturbingly, a certain cadre of elite Americans now cheer murder because they’re upset with the health-care system.

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The claim that America’s health-care system is uniquely terrible is simply belied by the facts. Health care, like any other service or good, is not free; it obeys the simple laws of economics, which suggest that scarcity is a basic condition of life. The United States, as it turns out, follows the same pattern as nearly every other developed country — the more we make, the more we spend on health care. That is just as true for the U.K. or Norway as it is for the United States.

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Furthermore, spending on health care is subject to the law of diminishing returns. Additional money spent does not necessarily equate to additional life expectancy. Finally, the United States population has a uniquely high proportion of overweight citizens, drug abusers and car accident victims. This affects overall life expectancy statistics negatively.

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This doesn’t mean the American health-care system is ideal. Far from it. Employer-based health insurance is a holdover from wage controls decades old; health insurers are not insurers at all — they are not in the business of assessing possible risk and then insuring against it; insurance regulations are abstruse and absurd and the government’s subsidization schemes involve low reimbursement rates and shoddy coverage. The problems are myriad.

It is absurd to lay the problems with American health care at the door of the “profit-driven CEOs.” It turns out that removing the profit margins on business does not make products, goods or services more efficient or better. That precise ideology has crippled a variety of countries in the last century.

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What’s worse is that ideology often excuses murder. Because, if health insurance CEOs are so cruel that they purposefully murder patients to earn a buck, why shouldn’t they be shot?

That’s the logic of comedian Bill Burr, who says, “I love that f—ing CEOs are f—ing afraid right now. You should be! By and large, you’re all a bunch of selfish greedy f—ing pieces of shit.”

Or Sen. Elizabeth Warren, who says, “Violence is never the answer, but people can be pushed only so far.”

Murder suspect Luigi Mangione is taken into the Blair County Courthouse on Tuesday, Dec. 10, 2024, in Hollidaysburg, Pa.
DREAMY: Murder suspect Luigi Mangione is taken into the Blair County Courthouse on Tuesday, Dec. 10, 2024, in Hollidaysburg, Pa. Photo by Benjamin B. Braun / Pittsburgh Post-Gazette /THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

This is the devil’s logic. If murder is justified by dissatisfaction with the system, we no longer live in a republic. We live in an anarchic, Hobbesian world of violence of all against all. Life is filled with grievances and hardships. If the response to such grievances and hardships is murdering CEOs, what precisely is the limiting principle?

The answer to flawed policy is better policy. But if you wish to see the American system torn down from within, you’re better off advocating bloodlust and murder.

Unfortunately, many Americans seem willing to tear down the American system itself rather than attempting to discuss rational solutions to intransigent problems.

Ben Shapiro is host of The Ben Shapiro Show and co-founder of Daily Wire+

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