Gamisch
Master Don Juan
- Joined
- May 2, 2022
- Messages
- 4,994
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Shout out to the mods @Dr.Suave , @Pierce Manhammer @BackInTheGame78 ect for letting this thread remain open !!!
Forget the cash, the cars, and the chiseled jawlines. Female desire operates on a completely different frequency. Primal. Subconscious. Triggers that bypass her logic and hit her on a gut level. Most guys are totally blind to them.
I know because I was one of them. The overthinking. The paralysis. The silent drive home kicking yourself for freezing up. Watching average guys walk away with the girl while you stood there stuck in your own head.
Then I decoded the psychology behind what actually makes women tick. 22 hard rules. Subtle behavioral shifts that rewired my entire reality. The anxiety evaporated. Women started leaning in. Investing. Chasing.
What happens, IN HER MIND, is that she comes to see you as WORTHLESS simply because she hasn't had to INVEST anything in you in order to get you or to keep you.
You were an interesting diversion while she had nothing else to do. But now that someone a little more valuable has come along, someone who expects her to treat him very well, she'll have no problem at all dropping you or demoting you to lowly "friendship" status.
Quote taken from The SoSuave Guide to Women and Dating, which you can read for FREE.
Had to remove a few posts as they were in violation of discussion rules but as long as politics and religion aren't heavily referenced it's fine to discuss.Shout out to the mods @Dr.Suave , @Pierce Manhammer @BackInTheGame78 ect for letting this thread remain open !!!
That's the problem with modern males. They always and only think about p0ssy, while actually hating women .No, I can't. But that's because I know that not all women are as shallow and delusional as you think women are.
thanksHad to remove a few posts as they were in violation of discussion rules but as long as politics and religion aren't heavily referenced it's fine to discuss.
What happens, IN HER MIND, is that she comes to see you as WORTHLESS simply because she hasn't had to INVEST anything in you in order to get you or to keep you.
You were an interesting diversion while she had nothing else to do. But now that someone a little more valuable has come along, someone who expects her to treat him very well, she'll have no problem at all dropping you or demoting you to lowly "friendship" status.
Quote taken from The SoSuave Guide to Women and Dating, which you can read for FREE.
Love it history repeating itself!!My 'guru' is an American philosopher:
You and I might both be Dutch, but we don't have the same history. I'm a pragmatist, a realist, and an absurdist. You want me to show empathy? My empathy is that I hope for the health insurance victims that the media circus around this assassination might issue social reform in the system, but as a realist I doubt it, and as an absurdist I just watch the spectacle and give humanity maybe a thousand years before we follow the dinosaurs.
And if my 'laissez-faire' phlegmatic attitude towards the freakshow 'crosses your line' and offends you, well, that's too bad.
Because, let us not forget what we're talking about:
View attachment 13605
Guess you didn't read the link I attached to my earlier post; the doctors have been outraged by their inability to treat and care for patients properly due to the greed of these corporate exes who are the ones directing the underwriters to deny the claims.If anyone is to blame, I would point to the underwriters, the doctors who misdiagnosed the illness, or the customer service managers—many of whom had more influence on Luigi’s situation than the CEO.
Yes, I understand your frustration with the US healthcare system. I live in Canada, where "free" healthcare (funded by taxes) provides a safety net that many, especially in the U.S., don’t have. It also ensures people don’t have to choose between their health and financial stability, a real concern for many Americans facing high medical bills.Guess you didn't read the link I attached to my earlier post; the doctors have been outraged by their inability to treat and care for patients properly due to the greed of these corporate exes who are the ones directing the underwriters to deny the claims.
>>"We as doctors have been crying, screaming on the top of our lungs regarding how lots of insurance companies are denying claims on a daily basis,” Mathew said on “NewsNation Now.” He cited examples of patients being unable to obtain routine tests like mammograms without extensive bureaucratic hurdles."<<
I do agree that murdering him was not the solution, I would have rather he be severely wounded requiring rehabilitation allowing him to physically suffer (like those whose claims are denied) and experience the outrage and backlash happening now.
In his case, he was directly responsible for the denial of Luigi's mom's claims which is why Luigi killed him.. Watching her in agonizing pain day in and day out just became too much for him to bear.
That's my understanding anyway but I believe it. HE and other execs in his position make the rules those under them who review the claims must abide by.
In addition to "defense of others" temporary insanity might apply as well, I don't know.
It's sad for everyone no matter how you slice and dice and my heart goes out to his family.
I thought GM’s resolution was unfair and a clear example of corporate greed. $1,000 is insignificant to them, and ignoring their employees' incompetence was frustrating. However, comparing my situation—where I lost money due to poor communication to someone being denied life-saving treatments is truly shameful. I expected better from you.Sounds like you suffered just as much as those people whose chemotherapy wasn't covered, you poor soul.
I can appreciate George Carlin’s wit and critical take on society—his ability to expose hypocrisy is sharp, though his philosophy is intentionally cynical. That said, leaning too heavily on absurdism or resignation can risk reducing complex, real-world tragedies to mere “spectacles,” and that’s where I take "issue".My 'guru' is an American philosopher:
You and I might both be Dutch, but we don't have the same history. I'm a pragmatist, a realist, and an absurdist. You want me to show empathy? My empathy is that I hope for the health insurance victims that the media circus around this assassination might issue social reform in the system, but as a realist I doubt it, and as an absurdist I just watch the spectacle and give humanity maybe a thousand years before we follow the dinosaurs.
And if my 'laissez-faire' phlegmatic attitude towards the freakshow 'crosses your line' and offends you, well, that's too bad.
Because, let us not forget what we're talking about:
View attachment 13605
You’re right that throughout history, violence has often been used as a way to address systemic grievances, but that doesn’t make it the best or most ethical option—especially in modern society, where we have tools like media, legal reform, and organized protest to amplify voices. The fact that violence has been a historical norm doesn’t mean we should resign ourselves to it as inevitable. If anything, history shows us that cycles of violence usually lead to more instability and suffering, not sustainable change.Society has been addressing systemic issues with murder since the beginning of time. Currently we have Hamas vs. Jerusalem, Ukraine(USA) vs Russia. Its human nature, regardless of how you or anyone feels about it.
There are many people fed up with the corrupt healthcare system in the United States. You should see the comments on social media, and the comments that get posted on news stories. Its the corporate hospitals, insurance companies, and doctors screwing over the American People. This event has people talking about how broken our healthcare system is, the volume has been turned up significantly. Thats something positive. Will anything more become? That has yet to be seen. But this act has been an impetus.
If it took the loss of one life to create change, then so be it. The son of a b!tch that got killed was no saint and neither is the industry he worked for. He is exactly what is wrong with America. The fuhkers keep taking.
You completely ignore the fact that masses of people that have been screwed, denied coverage, and died because of a broken healthcare system. Ohhh, these folks are just supposed to sit down and talk??? they are way beyond that. That was tried and they got nowhere. Thats how they feel....why can't you understand that. Have you not ever been beat down by the system and taken advantage of? You live under a damn rock?
This logic can be extended to just about anyone who works, votes, or pays taxes. E.g. my taxes have paid in part for the military which has destroyed more lives than UHC. In the past I've voted so ergo I've given my imprimatur to its actions and have blood on my hands.Brian Thompson chose to work as a CEO for a health insurance company. He wasn't forced to work there. He wasn't forced to be the guy who put stock prices over lives. He was in charge of the company that has a 32% claim denial rate. Twice the national average. He did not have to do that to make the company highly profitable. He just had to reduce C Suite compensation.
If you play jump rope with the law, there is always a risk that you get tangled up and fall. Brian Thompson took that risk. And he paid for his greed and arrogance.
I think you took my story out of context. My point was that anger is often misdirected, not that my situation was the same as someone’s life-threatening illness. Making an insensitive joke about it misses the point and isn’t helpful, and it downplays real suffering and makes light of serious issues.See, that's why you should just stay in the sandbox and not discuss topics with the adults.
YOU yourself compared your frustrating situation to the frustration the assassin felt towards that CEO for denying life-saving treatments:
Indeed, truly shameful comparison. Like saying to a chemo patient, 'I had the flu once, I know how you feel'. You should be ashamed.
Troll somewhere else, dildo.
Insurance in America is a ****ing scam.From CNN:
Mr. Thompson, whom colleagues knew as “BT,” joined the conglomerate UnitedHealth Group in 2004, and spent about 20 years rising through the ranks.
"He became chief executive of the insurance division, UnitedHealthcare, in April 2021, leading a unit that employs about 140,000 people and reported $281 billion in revenue last year.
Under his leadership, the company’s profits rose to more than $16 billion last year from $12 billion in 2021.
Mr. Thompson received total compensation of $10.2 million last year, with $1 million in base pay augmented by substantial cash and stock grants."
On X, a woman posted that her claim for breast cancer surgery was denied. She was asked by the UH rep "is it an emergency"?
She replied "gee I dunno, it's f***ing cancer, what do you think"?
Just one of many denials.
I have direct knowledge that before AI was used to approve/deny claims, the reps reviewing the claims were instructed to automatically deny the initial claim, often times without even reviewing.
They were banking on the insured not pursuing the denial. The claims that were considered for approval were when the insured appealed or the insured hired an attorney disputing the denial.
The firm I used to work for handled a lot of such denials and the insurance companies were so cut throat and nasty, it literally made me feel sick sometimes and one reason why I got out of the business.
P.S. I appreciate this thread allowing us (me) to vent. I am on another forum where it's not allowed and SM is nuts! Thanks mods.
Again, I’m not sure how you got so off track, but let me clarify: My point wasn’t to compare my frustration over a $1,000 warranty claim to the struggles of someone needing life-saving treatment. What I did say is that anger can get misdirected, and in both my example and yours, it's often placed on people who have little control over the broader issues at play.Maybe you shouldn't have contextualise your pathetic story with the events discussed in this thread.
Why bring your pathetic story up at all? Your frustration at a dealership has no relation to someone's health insurance denying a claim for life-saving medical procedures.
Bringing up your car dealership claim problems in this thread is actually insensitive. Wow, you suffered the loss a 1,000 dollars? How angry and frustrated you must've been. That should be comparable to someone going bankrupt because they have to pay for necessary life saving surgery out of their own pocket.
I could bring up that since 2015 I have to pay 440euro a month for my glaucoma medication, because (even though my medication prescribed by the chief optometrist & head of the ophthalmology department of my hospital) the health insurance denies my claim hiding behind their 'policies'.
If I would bring that up, it would make more sense than your pathetic car dealership story. I didn't bring it up (except here to show your foolishness) because in my health insurance case the claim denial is a mere nuisance, not a financial strain that threatens to bankrupt me and destroy my livelihood. Even though I feel the denial of my claim is unjustified, I'm not frustrated and/or angry at paying almost 50,000 euro for eye-saving medication. And I certainly would compare my plight with that of the UHC patients getting their claims maliciously denied.
Meanwhile, here you are b!tching about a car dealership warranty claim denial that cost you a mere 1,000 dollar. Yes, that is like telling a chemo patient you had the flu, so you know what they're going through.
High hobby horses have haughty halos, however.You made the connection between my example and chemotherapy patients, and it came off as deeply insensitive. Maybe if you want to be a better leader in this forum, it would help to admit when you're wrong instead of writing fictional posts about your imaginary lovers to get validation from other members here. Maybe it’s time to get off your high horse.
Preach to themSociety has been addressing systemic issues with murder since the beginning of time. Currently we have Hamas vs. Jerusalem, Ukraine(USA) vs Russia. Its human nature, regardless of how you or anyone feels about it.
There are many people fed up with the corrupt healthcare system in the United States. You should see the comments on social media, and the comments that get posted on news stories. Its the corporate hospitals, insurance companies, and doctors screwing over the American People. This event has people talking about how broken our healthcare system is, the volume has been turned up significantly. Thats something positive. Will anything more become? That has yet to be seen. But this act has been an impetus.
If it took the loss of one life to create change, then so be it. The son of a b!tch that got killed was no saint and neither is the industry he worked for. He is exactly what is wrong with America. The fuhkers keep taking.
You completely ignore the fact that masses of people that have been screwed, denied coverage, and died because of a broken healthcare system. Ohhh, these folks are just supposed to sit down and talk??? they are way beyond that. That was tried and they got nowhere. Thats how they feel....why can't you understand that. Have you not ever been beat down by the system and taken advantage of? You live under a damn rock?
You can skip the expensive cars, the fancy clothes, and the endless gym selfies. Completely unnecessary.
I used to freeze the second a beautiful woman looked my way. Frustrated. Awkward. Watching other guys walk away with the girl while I stood there tongue-tied.
Then I discovered 22 simple rules that rewired my entire dating life. The anxiety vanished. Conversations flowed effortlessly. Women started chasing me for a change.
These rules trigger a woman's subconscious attraction switches. And you can start using them tonight.