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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsFear in the C-Suite after UnitedHealthcare CEO gunned down
Corporations are scrambling to protect their senior executives as police warn of an elevated near-term threat against business leaders. Boards are reassessing security budgets. And CEOs are being told to delete their digital footprints.
The stunning killing of UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson in Midtown Manhattan last week has shaken C-Suites across the country, forcing leaders to ask themselves uncomfortable questions about their own preparedness for a threat landscape that appears far more serious than many realized just a week ago.
Phones are ringing off the hook at top-dollar security firms to keep the captains of industry safe.
Corporate America is nervous. People are on high-alert, Keith Wojcieszek, global head of intelligence at Kroll, told CNN in a phone interview.
Companies want to elevate their security posture. Healthcare is the target now but whos next? Wojcieszek said.
Clouds Passing
(2,536 posts)Attilatheblond
(4,411 posts)instead of the arrogance and moral bankruptcy they operate with, the risk of being held to account by a vigilante would decrease.
sakabatou
(43,195 posts)They don't care about anyone else. That's the medical staff's problem.
Ferryboat
(1,046 posts)Society is fracturing, old rules, social norms and general courtesy are being tossed aside.
There will be more of this in the future. Especially when you take benefits away from those who earned them or had planned on retirement using them.
Big business raping the population in pursuit of higher profits? There's many unjust examples to choose from.
The most dangerous person is one who has lost everything and no longer has nothing to lose.
The C-Suits should be afraid.
Wicked Blue
(6,722 posts)they better not pout, I'm telling you why
Karma time is coming to town.
There is a growing anger toward the arrogant, shameless oligarchy, and it will only get stronger once the Orange Traitor and his wrecking crew take over.
Raven123
(6,112 posts)They clearly have been living in a different America. Welcome to reality.
Coventina
(27,986 posts)MarineCombatEngineer
(14,389 posts)yagotme
(3,918 posts)On one hand, people are calling for the jailing of a man who was protecting others, and praising another man, who outright assassinated someone, all in the same timeframe. My brain can't work that way.
MarineCombatEngineer
(14,389 posts)Where, as a liberal/progressive site, are we headed to?
yagotme
(3,918 posts)sarisataka
(21,211 posts)In George Orwell's dystopian classic 1984, doublethink is the act of holding, simultaneously, two opposite, individually exclusive ideas or opinions and believing in both simultaneously and absolutely. Doublethink requires using logic against logic or suspending disbelief in the contradiction.
It is no longer just in fiction.
yagotme
(3,918 posts)Gives me quite the headache...
Blue_Roses
(13,449 posts)It's like the ongoing fight of the id and ego...
Ferryboat
(1,046 posts)the signs of rot are all around. It's just becoming more apparent.
Skittles
(159,936 posts)SICKENING
BannonsLiver
(18,131 posts)Its. Just. Not. Fair.
riversedge
(73,267 posts)Instead they can use some of their enormous profits! But, that said, it is so wrong that
CEO's have to buy protections.
hay rick
(8,256 posts)Raise premiums to provide 24-7 security for all the top execs. Another thing to spend money on other than health care. Move over advertising budget, executive bonus pool, share buybacks and dividends.
Meowmee
(5,892 posts)That could be the least of what may happen when orange psycho takes over.
AKwannabe
(6,399 posts)Darn
Tots and pears
Autumn
(46,508 posts)sarisataka
(21,211 posts)about a mass shooting at an insurance HQ
https://www.democraticunderground.com/100219810474
relatively few answers.
LeftInTX
(30,308 posts)The place is like a fortress. Insurance companies are constantly letting people go, so employees are always on edge. Lots of work grievances. I have an in-law that worked there for 20 years. When someone is let go, it's done via security.
Autumn
(46,508 posts)LeftInTX
(30,308 posts)Has huge grounds surrounding it, so anyone trying to take a potshot would be out of luck.
They constantly worry about employee grievances, hence the tight security within the facility. The facility has always been a fortress from the outside.
mercuryblues
(15,166 posts)In every school.
meadowlander
(4,754 posts)"Gee Sally, my tummy feels awful since Brian was gunned down in the street."
"Well Bobby, you're in luck. All you need is a functioning judicial system that holds everyone to account and then people wouldn't feel like the only way to resolve their grievances against mass murderers was with extrajudicial violence."
"Wow, Sally. That sounds so simple! But can't I just beef up my own security and keep killing people?"
"Nope."
"Try the Rule of Law. Side effects include not working if it is only applied to the poor and middle classes."
NJCher
(38,087 posts)You accomplished so much in so few words.