ID: image titled “Health Insurance CEOS and their pay:” above 8 photos of the CEO
Cigna, DAVID CORDANI $21M
WellCare, MICHAEL CARSON $23.5M
Humana, BRUCE BROUSSARD $16.3 M
CENTENE Corporation, SARAH LONDON $18.6 M
MOLINA HEALTHCARE, JOSEPH ZUBRETSKY $21.4 M
CVS Health, KAREN LYNCH $21.6 M
Elevance Health, GAIL BOUDREAUX $21.9 M
United Healthcare, BRIAN THOMPSON $10.2 M
-1 for extraneous “rule” at the end
I keep scanning the news to see if they found out anything about the shooter yet, aka The Adjuster, and they have absolutely nothing whatsoever. It’s like he didn’t really exist.
The Deposer
I like how the United Healthcare CEO is greyed out like a completed boss in Mega Man.
Well shit. Who’s the secret boss after they all get greyed out then?
Capitalism
It’s a double boss fight with Adam Smith and John Locke
Donald Trump
Missed opportunity to cross off the bottom right one.
Well it’s not the only black and white pic for no reason…
It’s more subtle than the x, but it sends the same message.
I didn’t make it, and I agree, but also that’d get it removed in an instant from most social media lol
This post would already get removed from .world
WHY are they getting paid SO GODDAMN MUCH MONEY??
THIS IS NOT WHY WE GAVE TAX BREAKS
Are tou familiar with the shadow of mordor mechanics? He’s just getting started
Are tou familiar with the shadow of mordor mechanics?
No, sorry 😂
he’s the number
fifteeeneight guy on the blaeklistthey are all small compared to the shareholders who likely decide the company policies more than the CEOs
Here’s a twist - YOU are the shareholder. One of them.
well I sure am somehow buying products that probably goes to one of the shareholders’ pockets that is for sure.
No, you are the shareholder because you receive your salary into a bank account which then automatically gets invested (and unless your bank is ripping you off you should be getting a monthly interest) and you have a pension which is also invested. You are an ACTUAL shareholder.
there is no monthly interest in regular accounts here unless you put it in a savers account. but yes I do and I know that my pension usually invests the money too without much flexibility on where to invest it in. so unless you are Ron Swanson there is no complete disconnection from this web. but the fix is easy: all I have to say is “individually major share holder” since those will be the ones deciding about company policies not me.
I think any company whose only shareholders are made up of people holding 0.000001% in shares wont suffer from the same consequences a company does when there are shareholders like %10, 20, 30 etc. Same difference between having billions or hundred thousands.
UnitedHealthcare Group should be in the picture as well, with Andrew Witty
$18.8 M (from 2021)23.5 M last year, according to another commenter.Witty is the CEO of the group. Thompson was only CEO of UnitedHealthcare - one of the parent conglomerates’ many subsidiaries.
Are you saying the shooter got the wrong guy?
No. I think he’s saying the shooter didn’t need to be so selective.
the symbolism of the investor conference is the chefs kiss
I think it’s more about denied claims. UHC denies more than 30% of claims whereas most other insurers range between 10-20%. UHC denies the most claims by a big margin. This is likely to make you some enemies.
10-20 percent is still insanely high, considering the amount of cases were taking about here. Even just one percent would be thousands suffering for no better reason than profits.
I think we need to accept that there are some fraudulent claims filed that should be denied. I have no idea what the percentage is or how to determine it, but I would think it is below 10%, probably below 5%.
Man, think about how much better the world would be if insurance companies were automatically audited with greater than 5% denials.
What a fantastic idea. You should run for office.
Better to accept a few fraudulent claims than deny a legitimate one IMO, but then again I’m not CEO material (I care about people)
UHC denies more than 30% of claims
Universal healthcare denies claims? What?
…
…
Core dumped
Segmentation fault
United Healthcare.
I see zero reason for it to not be both. These people are all your enemy, as is everyone above them in the chain.
7 more to go
It’s like a mega man boss screen
Not very much, just $196.000 a week.
…
I dont know why but 196k a week infuriates me so much more than 20mil a year
That’s why we accept billionaires, it’s too mindboggling to understand.
Right. It’s like hey I wanna hire you for a job. I’m quite generous so I’m going to offer you $50/hour. And I am also going to pay you 24/7, working, not working, sleeping, doesn’t matter. Then for some reason I’m going to back pay you all the way to year 0. So you’ll get that pay rate for the last 2024 years on the spot.
You’re still not a billionaire.
(approx $887,100,984 in case you’re wondering)
196k a week
That’s 19.44$ per minute.
What the FUCK
Reminder, at 20M per year you have to work ten thousand years to earn 200B, which is the realm Musk is in…
Certainly a very valid point, and hopefully we’re building up to that (bigger money comes with much tighter security), but I do think the people so directly sacrificing people’s lives for profit shouldn’t be overlooked.
Their salary shouldn’t matter as much as their insurance claim denial rates.
For real, Thompson might be the lowest on the list, but United had some of the highest denial rates. And I bet they’re damn proud of the rates too.
This photo is notably missing Andrew Witty the CEO of UnitedHealth Group the parent company of UnitedHealthcare of which Brian Thompson was CEO. Andrew Witty made $23.5m last year.
I bet that guy is finding sleep elusive.
I wonder how many UHC members have found sleep difficult while nauseated, in pain, and dying because of care they were denied by UHC.
He probably has 10-15 federal Marshalls outside his bedroom as we speak, pulling guard duty.
For sure, but I’d like to believe there is a fresh new fear in their minds. Kinda like what if the doc finds something serious and I go bankrupt from the treatment.
On our dime.
I hope his request for sleeping pills gets denied by his insurance.














