Cigna tracks every minute that its staff doctors spend deciding whether to pay for health care. Dr. Debby Day said her bosses cared more about being fast than being right: “Deny, deny, deny. That’s how you hit your numbers,” Day said.
I have to wonder how anybody could still consider themselves a doctor if they fall in line and do this shit with insurers? They should lose their medical licenses for this. It’s despicable.
Valid, but also “I’m going to work at this evil company, giving them the benefit of my labor, which they will take far more profit from my labor than they will ever give back to me, because I’m desperate and need to pay bills, so I’m going to ignore the knock-on effects about how this is worse for society as a whole because gosh darn it my personal needs are just so much more important than what happens to wider society.”
To me, it feels like nihilism or solipsism. “There’s no such thing as society.” It ignores the existence of Mutual Aid groups, despite their weakness and lack of exposure to rural areas. It’s giving into American isolation, where only you can save yourself and feed yourself. Never lean on anyone. Never form a real society.
These are professionals with professional credentials, not someone working at McDonald’s in a rural area with no access to a mutual aid group to help them. Out of anyone, they are the most likely to have a network of friends and connections that could conceivably help them if they lost their job.
I get really tired of that attitude. You’re suffering under the thumb of the problem, so your solution is to just give into the thumb and give it more weight for others, worsening the problem? The price of your education is making others suffer?
I have to wonder how anybody could still consider themselves a doctor if they fall in line and do this shit with insurers? They should lose their medical licenses for this. It’s despicable.
This falls under the “I have to pay rent and student loans” category.
As does so many millions of other Americans, and yet here we are talking about life and death.
Valid, but also “I’m going to work at this evil company, giving them the benefit of my labor, which they will take far more profit from my labor than they will ever give back to me, because I’m desperate and need to pay bills, so I’m going to ignore the knock-on effects about how this is worse for society as a whole because gosh darn it my personal needs are just so much more important than what happens to wider society.”
To me, it feels like nihilism or solipsism. “There’s no such thing as society.” It ignores the existence of Mutual Aid groups, despite their weakness and lack of exposure to rural areas. It’s giving into American isolation, where only you can save yourself and feed yourself. Never lean on anyone. Never form a real society.
These are professionals with professional credentials, not someone working at McDonald’s in a rural area with no access to a mutual aid group to help them. Out of anyone, they are the most likely to have a network of friends and connections that could conceivably help them if they lost their job.
I get really tired of that attitude. You’re suffering under the thumb of the problem, so your solution is to just give into the thumb and give it more weight for others, worsening the problem? The price of your education is making others suffer?