Sounds like a Babylon Bee article. “CDC worries that deaths and injuries from their poison jab may impact the public’s opinion of their product causing sales to plummet. Their scientists are baffled.”
Insurance don't want to pay out for anything, ever. Tree falls on your house during a bad storm, explicitly covered by your insurance? They'll drag it out for months or longer before you see anything.
Fun part is that insurance should be going after Big Pharma after paying out because that is their priority as an insurance company.
Correct. Ed Dowd who wrote the book Died Suddenly is saying the whispering among insurance types is growing. Actuaries are very precise at what they do. All of a sudden people start dropping before estimated time?
I knew working in insurance during Covid this would be the outcome. Fun fact, a question on a life insurance application asks if your child has taken add/adhd medicine before the age of 9. It affects their ability to get a policy. What does taking those meds before the age 9 do to the body that lessens the chance the person will make it to 65?
Sounds like a Babylon Bee article. “CDC worries that deaths and injuries from their poison jab may impact the public’s opinion of their product causing sales to plummet. Their scientists are baffled.”
Insurance companies not wanting to go bankrupt from payouts are NOT baffled.
It’s either pharma or insurance corps
ROUND 1: FIGHT
Insurance don't want to pay out for anything, ever. Tree falls on your house during a bad storm, explicitly covered by your insurance? They'll drag it out for months or longer before you see anything.
Fun part is that insurance should be going after Big Pharma after paying out because that is their priority as an insurance company.
Correct. Ed Dowd who wrote the book Died Suddenly is saying the whispering among insurance types is growing. Actuaries are very precise at what they do. All of a sudden people start dropping before estimated time?
I knew working in insurance during Covid this would be the outcome. Fun fact, a question on a life insurance application asks if your child has taken add/adhd medicine before the age of 9. It affects their ability to get a policy. What does taking those meds before the age 9 do to the body that lessens the chance the person will make it to 65?