Mario is often a dick in the games. Luigi is the real hero.
36
TheSlad @sh.itjust.works - 1.1yr
Also its just factually incorrect. That argument doesnt work for healthcare for two reasons:
it is a necessary service. People who need it don't have a choice.
Practically nobody actually buys their own health insurance; they get it as a "benefit" from their employer who chooses the provider and available plans... and guess what? Their employer is also a company whose only goal is to maximize profits. Yes there is an open marketplace for health insurance but be honest have you actually heard of anyone actually using it?
So basically its not really a free market, its a cartel and they can charge whatever the fuck they want.
19
Dragon Rider (drag) - 1.1yr
90s Mario was a proud union member. 20s Mario is a monarchist class traitor.
8
DragonTypeWyvern @midwest.social - 1.1yr
I remember his memoir in 93 when he discussed the ethics of defending one monarchy from another, it was very insightful but it began to ring hollow by the tenth war he fought against Bowser.
1
festnt @sh.itjust.works - 1.1yr
what does he say?
6
Signtist @lemm.ee - 1.1yr
"It's-a me! Mario!"
25
festnt @sh.itjust.works - 1.1yr
oh ok
4
TriflingToad @sh.itjust.works - 1.1yr
People don't seem to get it. Here's an example of the meme format:
Edit: dang apparently this one's examples are kinda crazy :/
33
Uriel238 [all pronouns] - 1.1yr
The insurance companies willfully conspire to fix prices.
Or to paraphrase that Your Cable Company commercial, see, our service is what is called an oligopoly which is the same as a monopoly, but perfectly legal.
Now just to clarify, because a lot of people are endorsing violence: Violence will not bring justice. Nor will it resolve your specific grievance.
What violence will do (provided there's enough of it) is force the society to create a system that does solve grievances for which people turn to violence.
So you can't kill one CEO and expect change. But if you kill hundreds of health insurance upper management (yes, there's a lot of them), or if you burn down dozens of insurance company offices, or find a way to cost the insurance companies billions of dollars, then the state will have to do something about it, and that's after it overwhelms law enforcement.
Flareon in 196
OC rule
Mario absolutely does not say that.
Mario is often a dick in the games. Luigi is the real hero.
Also its just factually incorrect. That argument doesnt work for healthcare for two reasons:
it is a necessary service. People who need it don't have a choice.
Practically nobody actually buys their own health insurance; they get it as a "benefit" from their employer who chooses the provider and available plans... and guess what? Their employer is also a company whose only goal is to maximize profits. Yes there is an open marketplace for health insurance but be honest have you actually heard of anyone actually using it?
So basically its not really a free market, its a cartel and they can charge whatever the fuck they want.
90s Mario was a proud union member. 20s Mario is a monarchist class traitor.
I remember his memoir in 93 when he discussed the ethics of defending one monarchy from another, it was very insightful but it began to ring hollow by the tenth war he fought against Bowser.
what does he say?
"It's-a me! Mario!"
oh ok
People don't seem to get it. Here's an example of the meme format:
https://sh.itjust.works/pictrs/image/ba12018a-ecfa-4dac-994c-165a20ba0081.jpeg
Here's the explanation and other examples: https://knowyourmeme.com/memes/mario-bros-views-mario-says
Edit: dang apparently this one's examples are kinda crazy :/
The insurance companies willfully conspire to fix prices.
Or to paraphrase that Your Cable Company commercial, see, our service is what is called an oligopoly which is the same as a monopoly, but perfectly legal.
Now just to clarify, because a lot of people are endorsing violence: Violence will not bring justice. Nor will it resolve your specific grievance.
What violence will do (provided there's enough of it) is force the society to create a system that does solve grievances for which people turn to violence.
So you can't kill one CEO and expect change. But if you kill hundreds of health insurance upper management (yes, there's a lot of them), or if you burn down dozens of insurance company offices, or find a way to cost the insurance companies billions of dollars, then the state will have to do something about it, and that's after it overwhelms law enforcement.
You've been Luigi'd.