cross-posted from: https://lemmy.fosshost.com/post/1649457
still no notes 😂
Liked this enough to go find the creator. Sharing a link to their work, unlike OP.
unlike OP
This is fucking stupid. The artist’s details are included in the image OP shared, exactly as the artist left them. You didn’t “go find” shit, you googled a couple words from the image. Grow up. Share a link and say thanks for the post.
Not going out of your way to crop the artist’s info out is the bare minimum. Friction is everything, if there’s a link, there’s a way higher chance folks will visit.
Ok, double down on the sanctimony—you wouldn’t’ve seen the comic if OP hadn’t shared it.
I’m glad I saw it, but that doesn’t mean OP (and others) can’t do better.
Thank you for sharing the artist’s information, but you didn’t have to be an asshole about it. It’s a crosspost with the artist’s information included.
Not sharing it in the first place is way more of a dick move than me calling you out for it.
Agreed. The nerve of using that foul language against your good-willed character. What a tool.
“Thomas was sick of this shit”
ugh that’s dark
Removed by mod
Since a healthcare system does not have to be designed in such a way that people inevitably fall by the wayside, this depiction of the trolley problem seems to me to be a pretty US-American thing.
I see it like this: the guy on the lever is also the CEO of a health insurance company and chooses the option of eliminating a competitor, accepting that his even more profit-optimized approach will lead to even more helpless people dying, which would not have been necessary if he had left everything as it was and not eliminated the competitor. The US thing about this is that there is no third option in the first place, where nobody dies because of the healthcare system. This very basic fact is not noticed, addressed or even criticized by anyone. Instead, even those who will die unnecessarily agree with the guy in charge in his decision to sacrifice them on the altar of higher profits because a hated person will die with them - they even agree with his statement that it would be for the greater good, instead of asking why it is even necessary for them to be tied to the tracks and run over.
This seems odd to me, but is probably only logical if you’re used to seeing the healthcare system as a business like any other. I don’t really get it tho.
Its also a problem for Alaska Hawaii and all of the uda over sea territories.