For information purposes, Luigi pled not guilty.

“They’re putting all of this effort and the death penalty behind one person who allegedly killed one CEO who is responsible and profiting off of the death of thousands upon thousands of sick people and bringing people into financial ruin as well as death,” said Tilly, a Mangione supporter wearing a lime green jacket and light green sunglasses. “They do not put this same effort behind, say, school shooters or people who shoot up concerts.”

“It shows that the state has more care for the uber-wealthy and the CEOs that are profiting off of people’s death and pain than they do for the people.”

  • gedaliyah@lemmy.world
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    5 days ago

    Hi, Mod here. Please update the post to match the article title in order to avoid removal. You can include any relevant context or commentary in your description or comments.

  • tocopherol@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    5 days ago

    It’s so clear how much more the state cares about the rich. They spent millions searching for him when the same week there were multiple other people killed in NYC that didn’t even receive news coverage let alone a multi-million dollar manhunt.

  • manxu@piefed.social
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    5 days ago

    “They do not put this same effort behind, say, school shooters or people who shoot up concerts.”

    I think the real question here is: how many lives were saved by insurance companies temporarily being scared into not ludicrously rejecting valid claims?

    If it’s more than one, then Mangione played the trolley problem in real life and decided an outcome.

  • Chozo@fedia.io
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    5 days ago

    Ugh, I hate that they put the stupidest arguments front and center in stories like this.

    “They do not put this same effort behind, say, school shooters or people who shoot up concerts.”

    Yeah no shit, because mass shooters generally don’t survive their attacks. The similarities between a mass shooting and the shooting of one person are few and far between - the motive, execution, and follow-up investigations are wildly different in each scenario.

    I get wanting to support Luigi, but disingenuous comparisons like that aren’t doing him any favors.

    • Darkassassin07@lemmy.ca
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      5 days ago

      When’s the last time a school shooter (that made it to trial, obviously), got slapped with terrorism charges, had the prosecution seek the death penalty, or get prevented from accessing their family/lawyers for extended periods?

      I agree, there are few similarities between the two crimes. I would say shooting up a building full of innocent children, particularly when death is involved, is a significantly worse crime than killing a single man. Yet the sought punishments are wildly disproportionate in the opposite direction.

      • CosmicTurtle0@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        5 days ago

        To give a huge benefit of the doubt, we haven’t had fascism times for these school shooters.

        If a shooter makes it to arrangement today, I would expect fascism to make an example out of them as well and slap terrorism charges.

        The analogy, while clumsy, is still accurate: the rules for us do not apply to the rich and powerful.

        For fuck says we have a convicted felon as president and at his sentencing the judge said, “Uh, woopsie! Guess the jury was wrong. Go about your life, dear rich citizen.”

        • Darkassassin07@lemmy.ca
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          5 days ago

          Are you sure they won’t just be offered a job at the whitehouse? All they’ve gotta do is say they love Trump and he’ll sign a pardon after all.