More Violence Inherent to Leftism: Toxic Sympathy for Health Insurance CEO Murder

Taminad Crittenden
Non-violence
Published in
3 min readDec 8, 2024

--

If we want a peaceful future for humanity, everyone needs to stop excusing or idolizing the man who killed the United Healthcare CEO.

This is not a game.

Do we want a future with more killings?

Then stop idolizing him. Stop excusing him.

Sure, we can safely assume that the United Healthcare CEO is responsible for at least some deaths that may not have happened were it not for the typically inhumane penny-pinching of the stereotypical capitalist.

However, even then, we should not be encouraging or excusing more killing.

As this publication has pointed out in the past, American progressive leftwingers allied with the Democratic Party have an inherent violent nature to them. Their preferred method for solving society’s problems is to acquire a bare democratic majority and then use the police to coerce dissenters into obeying them.

American progressive leftwing Democrats regularly excuse riots, and celebrate protestors who shut down the legitimate functioning of government when it favors their cause (e.g., SCOTUS pro-abortion wackos, and all the state legislature disruptions like in Wisconsin), but hypocritically pretend to hold the moral high ground when their opponents do the same thing like on January 6, 2021.

Sure, American progressive leftwing Democrats’ inflammatory, hyperbolic rhetoric has

--

--

Non-violence
Non-violence

Published in Non-violence

Too many supposed peacemakers hide their reliance on the violence of police enforcement even from themselves. Violence is physical, not verbal. Humanity has a duty to envision new ways to prevent violence (government or not) & solve other problems voluntarily without coercion.

Taminad Crittenden
Taminad Crittenden

Written by Taminad Crittenden

Analyst. Tip me on https://ko-fi.com/taminadcrittenden or send me some Ethereum digital currency at at this address: 0x5ffe3e60a7f85a70147e800c37116b3ad97afd5e

Responses (3)