Children with cancer scammed out of millions fundraised for their treatment
Posted by 1659447091 13 hours ago
Comments
Comment by Animats 11 hours ago
Chance Letikva is registered with the US IRS as a charity. They've filed a Form 990. Location is Brooklyn, NY. [1] Address is listed. It's a small house. It's also incorporated as CHANCE LETIKVA, INC. in New York State. Address matches. Names of officers not given. There's one name in the IRS filing, listed as the president.
Web site "https://chanceletikva.org" has been "suspended". Domain is still registered, via Namecheap.
Some on the ground digging and subpoenas should reveal who's behind this.
[1] https://projects.propublica.org/nonprofits/organizations/852...
Comment by jdranczewski 11 hours ago
Comment by mlrtime 7 hours ago
Comment by afavour 6 hours ago
In this instance it was a bust because no one useful was there. But if the mastermind behind the whole operation was there you’d want a professional to ask them questions. Because once they know they’ve been rumbled they’re probably going to disappear.
Comment by tclancy 2 hours ago
Comment by deanishe 41 minutes ago
Hardly surprising given the contrast to the level of journalistic integrity on display at the Beeb recently.
Comment by interstice 4 hours ago
Comment by buellerbueller 4 hours ago
>[copypasta] half understood content with additional spin
then what you are reading is not journalism.
Comment by JumpCrisscross 3 hours ago
In most cases, if you aren't paying for it, it is not journalism.
Comment by jjcob 10 hours ago
Comment by Sharlin 8 hours ago
A news piece in a foreign affairs section is likely to have been written by a correspondent because that’s what their job and specialty is. If it’s an op-ed or a commentary or analysis piece, even more so. It’s not like you can do good journalism without boots on the ground, no matter how connected the world is these days.
Comment by boringg 4 hours ago
I mean it does feel like that should be standard operation for journalism on bigger stories but I think our expectations from journalists have really fallen over the last 5 years with all the slop coming in.
Comment by alwa 2 hours ago
Most of us don’t have the tools or the time to do it properly, at least on here; and that can end badly [0]. It rarely achieves a thoughtful considered outcome, and there are other places to do that kind of thing if you want to—some of those communities, like Bellingcat, seem pretty well-practiced in their methodologies, and their findings seem to have accordingly high impact.
[0] e.g. https://www.bbc.com/news/technology-22214511 … and https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Suicide_of_Sunil_Tripathi
Comment by eleveriven 9 hours ago
Comment by pksebben 11 hours ago
Edit: Clicked through some of the other entries in there and yeah, usually liabilities are relatively close to incomes. How the system didn't catch this is beyond me.
Comment by JumpCrisscross 3 hours ago
At what point do audit requirements kick in for charities?
Comment by chaostheory 3 hours ago
Comment by naian 9 hours ago
Comment by krebsonsecurity 2 hours ago
Looking at the passive DNS records for the domain chanceletikva.org shows it references the email address davidm@yeahdim.co.il.That email address is tied to multiple website registrations for a person by the name of David Margaliot, and also Shoshana Margaliot.
A search on this name in Domaintools finds the name David Margaliot tied to at least 25 domains, including ezri.org.il, which is a very odd site that features a huge image of a young child who is apparently in the hospital holding a gift wrapped box with a teddy bear. The site asks for donations but has a strange mission statement: Ezri Association promotes life-saving innovation through a surveillance drone project for emergency response teams, the establishment of an international medical knowledge database, along with other technological initiatives".
I'll probably continue the rest of this in a follow-up story.
Comment by tchalla 10 hours ago
Comment by eleveriven 9 hours ago
Comment by xeonmc 8 hours ago
Local man embezzles $20,000 meant to keep 200 orphans from being crushed in the orphan-crushing machine.Comment by lionkor 7 hours ago
Comment by j-krieger 7 hours ago
Comment by fireflash38 6 hours ago
Comment by reactordev 5 hours ago
Comment by barbazoo 3 hours ago
Comment by reactordev 3 hours ago
Comment by 867-5309 8 hours ago
Comment by fwipsy 3 hours ago
Also, the scale seems much larger than $20k.
Comment by MSFT_Edging 6 hours ago
The incentives are there. Our economy runs on incentives. Create a vulnerable group and the sharks smell blood in the water.
Comment by laughingcurve 5 hours ago
Comment by MSFT_Edging 4 hours ago
For example, families forced to publicly beg for money to provide their sick children with treatment. What societal structures enable this situation to occur? Who is profiting off of this structure?
Comment by IAmBroom 5 hours ago
Comment by philipallstar 7 hours ago
Comment by hermannj314 5 hours ago
Involuntary, progressive crowdfunding through government threat of violence (taxes) seems to work better than the other methods and most consider it humane. Americans have shown little interest historically in doing the humane thing, unfortunately.
Comment by buellerbueller 4 hours ago
Comment by delfinom 6 hours ago
I mean almost the entirety of the US healthcare system is a industrialized scam engineered by middlemen
Comment by bko 5 hours ago
To put another way, if I were facing some terminal illness I would want to have full control of picking the service even if it costs money. Sure, I would want "the best" specific to me and have someone else pick up the tab, but that's a fantasy, because no system or third party has as much skin in the game as me. That's why things like elective surgery are so cheap and competitive.
The problem is why do these treatments cost so much? What prevents competition and innovation. And my argument it's largely due to regulation and third party payer system
Comment by Retric 4 hours ago
The general public doesn’t have enough information to make informed decisions when it comes to healthcare. This alone completely removes the usual market forces from providing any benefit when it comes to healthcare.
Cancer treatments don’t inherently cost that much money, the systems to ensure people are actually getting useful treatments are expensive. You can’t trust companies selling cures. You can’t trust every doctor when they have financial incentives to offer treatments. Insurance companies are in an adversarial relationship with providing treatments, which doesn’t result in efficient supervision here. Lawsuits offer some protection, but at extreme cost to everyone involved. Etc etc.
The net result of all these poor incentives is single payer systems end up being way more efficient, resulting in people living longer and spending less on healthcare.
Comment by bko 2 hours ago
Why is it always "the general public" and not "I". Do you have enough information about decisions? Can I take away some of your rights? No, of course not. Everyone else is dumb except me.
I'm sorry but I refuse to believe some unelected, anonymous bureaucrat has my best interests in mind or can even know me anything about me such that I want to allow them to make health decisions for me.
Comment by TehCorwiz 2 hours ago
I trust government staff far more than the decision of unregulated, greedy corporations who literally exist to extract the most money from whatever process they're trying to sell you.
Comment by bko 1 hour ago
I have trouble believing empowering people who have no risk of losing their job and no one knows they exist is the best model for making decisions for other people.
Comment by TehCorwiz 1 hour ago
EDIT: Also the whole VA system.
Comment by nobody9999 1 hour ago
You mean like the (non-medical doctors) third-parties contracted by my private insurance provider who routinely deny important care[0] and even reject pre-approvals for antibiotics for MRSA infections even after multiple interactions with several medical doctors confirming both the diagnosis (with accompanying pathology) and the appropriate course of treatment.
Yeah, you keep that rolled up newspaper handy so you can "Gub'mint bad! Bad Gub'mint!"
I hope you never have to deal with a life-threatening situation where your insurer flatly refuses to cover treatment until after you're dead or have body parts amputated.
Comment by Retric 2 hours ago
Me personally, No.
I don’t have enough information to make informed decisions here and you don’t either. Off the top of your head, how well educated is your dentist? You after all made an informed decision picking them. So how well did their background compare to others in your area. What where your concerns about their dental programs weaknesses and how was that offset by… Except no let me guess that never entered your mind did it.
Comment by bko 1 hour ago
My dentist cleans my teeth. If it's painful every time I come or I keep getting cavities I consider changing dentists. If they suggest I replace my teeth with veneers or something extreme, I consider someone else. And I'll do a few google searches.
It seems pretty normal. You don't do this?
Comment by Retric 1 hour ago
So you don’t need to continue, you just proved my point.
Comment by overfeed 2 hours ago
I'm sorry to tell you that this is, but unelected bureaucrats are constantly making health decisions on your behalf. You may not want government bureaucrats, but bureaucrats already work in your employer's HR department, deciding on which insurer to partner with, and with what benefits. They are at your insurance company, doctors office, and hospital administration, negotiating and deciding which procedures and drugs are available to you without ever asking for your opinion. Bureaucrats you didn't vote for infest drug company's research and finance offices, determining the availability and cost of your present and future care. None of these even pretend to act in your interests.
I'd rather have some government bureaucrat preside over all the other predatory bureaucrats. I sure as hell wouldn't be make well-informed decisions in the ER, or after getting a cancer diagnosis. Further, it is impossible to compare provider quality and final costs for elective, cosmetic procedures when I'm under no time pressure or stress.
Comment by bko 1 hour ago
I have no problem with bureaucrats. I want a choice. If I come in one day to find the shelves empty, I go somewhere else. If they make it difficult for me to check out, or are too expensive, I change. I just want choice.
You can choose to listen to the same unelected anonymous bureaucrats. Just log on to FDA or whatever, and follow their advice (e.g. follow the food pyramid). Only one of us wants to remove choice from the other, and that's the difference.
Comment by k1musab1 5 hours ago
Comment by bko 2 hours ago
Comment by ryandrake 2 hours ago
This is basically a religious belief at this point. It's how a perfectly ideal free market might work, but we don't have any of these, especially in healthcare.
Comment by bko 1 hour ago
Probably 99% of what I consume comes from private companies and the services generally get better over time, with some exceptions. Compare that to an experience with the TSA.
Comment by ThrowMeAway1618 55 minutes ago
You're adorable! Do you believe in Santa and the tooth fairy too?
Comment by nickpp 3 hours ago
Collusion and cartels never work on the long run. It's an unstable equilibrium, the incentive to reduce prices to capture more market is too great.
> What is it that still makes you believe
Competition. It's the only force keeping humans honest. That's why we must treat any barriers of entry in a market with extreme care. The only "failed" or "captured" market is a strongly regulated one.
Comment by jgeada 3 hours ago
For example, while the Phoebus cartel only really lasted from 1925 through to 1939, 1000hr incandescent light bulbs remain the standard offering till present day. Profitable market manipulations are sticky.
The whole notion that markets are efficient is just a mathematical construct that has become very dogmatic for people. But if you look into the details, markets are efficient under the assumptions of perfect information and infinite time. Neither of those conditions are present in the real world: we neither have perfect information nor infinite time.
Comment by jittles 2 hours ago
Pure misanthropic fantasy pretending to be sophisticated economics.
Comment by lenkite 2 hours ago
Define "long run" - they have been already proven to have worked for years and in some cases even decades.
Comment by charles_f 4 hours ago
This is simply not true. Healthcare in the US is comparatively much more expensive than countries offering subsidized healthcare with comparable or better outcomes(1).
> it's largely due to regulation and third party payer system
Capitalism can't work in a market that's completely consolidated, and where people can't offer to not buy your service. Healthcare in publicly subsidized countries is much less expensive because it's regulated. Compare the price of simple drugs like insulin or asthma medicine if you need an easy example. Pharma companies still happily sell there, which is to say that the difference is pure profit on the back of sick people who don't have a choice.
My biggest grief against this individual payment system is moral though. I don't see the virtue in a system where kids have to put on a show to receive care. Or anyone for that matter, you'll give to a kid because they're cute and generate empathy, does it make someone ugly with no family less deserving of getting cured from cancer?
1: https://www.healthsystemtracker.org/chart-collection/health-...
Comment by jgeada 3 hours ago
So it is a highly asymmetric bargaining situation where all the incentives are poorly aligned. Of course it is exploitative.
Comment by bko 2 hours ago
And now your death will have a meaningful change to the career bureaucrat or politician that made the decision that led to your death.
Because power of an individual vote is much more powerful than the power to take your business elsewhere. That's if you can find out the responsible party that makes these decisions and they're not appointed but elected, otherwise you'd have to mount an influence campaign on the politicians with 90% re-election rate to change said bureaucratic leader.
Makes a lot of sense.
Comment by jgeada 1 hour ago
But seems some prefer to believe a theoretical argument with no evidence to back it up.
“The Party told you to reject the evidence of your eyes and ears. It was their final, most essential command.”
Comment by ruszki 3 hours ago
Comment by dev0p 10 hours ago
Comment by OscarTheGrinch 10 hours ago
Comment by Hendrikto 9 hours ago
Same with education. I am more than happy to pay taxes for an education system, even if I do not personally have children.
Comment by catlikesshrimp 8 hours ago
Public health systems vary with country. Private advocates say public sucks, until it is their turn to be scammed.
Comment by mothballed 8 hours ago
Public education is largely a scam to put 'original sin' of debt of children to society so when they grow up there is some plausible explanation that "we're a society" and they must feed into the pyramid scheme.
Comment by ChrisMarshallNY 7 hours ago
I'm not sure what nation you're from, but here, in the US, we pay a fairly significant part of our wages towards something called "Social Security."
If we pay a lot, during our working time, we can draw more, after retirement (and it is nowhere near a living wage -it was never meant to be).
In my country, we pay for education with property taxes.
Comment by czl 7 hours ago
Kids are not only getting classroom time. They inherit a whole baseline that previous taxpayers built: safer streets, clean water, courts that mostly function, vaccines, roads, libraries, stable money, and the accumulated tech and culture that makes modern jobs even possible. That bundle is huge, and it starts paying out long before anyone is old enough to “owe” anything.
Also, adults are not literally trapped. People can move, downshift, opt out of a lot, or choose different communities. Most don’t, even when they complain loudly, and to me that’s a pretty strong signal the deal is at least somewhat reasonable. Not perfect. Not fair for everyone. But not a cartoon pyramid scheme either.
If there’s a real fight worth having, it’s making the burdens and benefits less lopsided across generations, not pretending the whole social investment in kids is fake.
Comment by DiscourseFan 6 hours ago
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Comment by jonhohle 4 hours ago
Comment by lo_zamoyski 5 hours ago
We’re not billiard balls. We have agency. Nothing causes a human being to choose to commit immoral acts vs. immoral acts. A human being may be put in a situation that may entice that person’s corrupt desires (we used to call this temptation), and responsibility while mitigating culpability is possible when someone’s rational faculties are overwhelmed, but the choice remains.
Blaming systems for theft is scapegoating and an evasion of responsibility. (To make this clearer by distinction: a starving man taking bread from an overstocked warehouse during a famine is not choosing to commit an immoral act; he isn’t stealing in the first place, as some share of that bread is his).
Comment by pixl97 4 hours ago
Comment by ivape 7 hours ago
Let’s say I have a bag of bread, and I pass them down one by one expecting people to only keep one. You decide to keep two.
The human’s reasoning is often bulletproof:
I don’t have enough. You do. I’d didn’t steal from the person next to me, I took it from someone with plenty
^ No where in that reasoning is the possibility that in the aggregate, if enough people do that, you steal from each other.
—-
Insecurity needs to be rehabilitated before any form of support can be provided. Otherwise you get toxic results. How could charity possible go wrong? Easy - bad hearts are left untreated.
Comment by cwillu 6 hours ago
Today a hope of many years' standing is in large part fulfilled. The civilization of the past hundred years, with its startling industrial changes, has tended more and more to make life insecure. Young people have come to wonder what would be their lot when they came to old age. The man with a job has wondered how long the job would last.
This social security measure gives at least some protection to thirty millions of our citizens who will reap direct benefits through unemployment compensation, through old-age pensions and through increased services for the protection of children and the prevention of ill health.
We can never insure one hundred percent of the population against one hundred percent of the hazards and vicissitudes of life, but we have tried to frame a law which will give some measure of protection to the average citizen and to his family against the loss of a job and against poverty-ridden old age.
This law, too, represents a cornerstone in a structure which is being built but is by no means complete. It is a structure intended to lessen the force of possible future depressions. It will act as a protection to future Administrations against the necessity of going deeply into debt to furnish relief to the needy. The law will flatten out the peaks and valleys of deflation and of inflation. It is, in short, a law that will take care of human needs and at the same time provide for the United States an economic structure of vastly greater soundness.
I congratulate all of you ladies and gentlemen, all of you in the Congress, in the executive departments and all of you who come from private life, and I thank you for your splendid efforts in behalf of this sound, needed and patriotic legislation.
If the Senate and the House of Representatives in this long and arduous session had done nothing more than pass this Bill, the session would be regarded as historic for all time. ”
--Franklin D. Roosevelt
Comment by Atreiden 6 hours ago
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Comment by why-o-why 2 hours ago
Comment by throwaw12 7 hours ago
Parents had enough problems to think about.
In a similar way we can say that every shop in Amazon can create own digital shop themselves, but marketing, sales channels and distribution is not easy to acquire.
Comment by binary132 4 hours ago
Comment by ivape 7 hours ago
Money goes in, and good feelings come out. It certainly serves a purpose, but not the intended one.
Comment by input_sh 7 hours ago
To put it in HN terms, this is what people here like to use to shit on Mozilla for how much they pay their executives while having zero insight into how much Firefox's for-profit competitors pay their executives.
Comment by jlarocco 3 hours ago
It's dubious to say Google "competes" with Mozilla, because they pay Mozilla to develop Firefox to avoid antitrust issues, but it's easy enough to find CEO compensation for public companies.
https://www.sec.gov/answers/execcomp.htm
Of course people have published the numbers for well known companies:
https://www.jagranjosh.com/general-knowledge/highest-paid-ce...
Also, "Other companies pay their CEOs ridiculous amounts, so we're going to," is a poor justification, and just shows Mozilla execs are there to enrich themselves, and don't really care about the browser or community. But I guess they can't spend all of the money on Pocket and AI.
Comment by ivape 7 hours ago
Is the bottom line roughly:
Money received: 1000
Money used for good: 800
Labor: 200
Is that it?
Because I can assure you, that will not turn out well.
Comment by sgerenser 6 hours ago
Comment by Avicebron 6 hours ago
Comment by input_sh 6 hours ago
The same people that audit your taxes, roughly with the same consequences for lying. Except the IRS is far more likely to send unannounced auditors to NGOs than they are to send them to for-profit companies or individuals. It's more of a hassle to get/retain tax-free status than it is to simply pay your taxes like everyone else (as it should be).
> Is that it?
Let me guess: you haven't clicked on "view filing", which leads to a roughly 20-pages-long document.
Comment by ivape 4 hours ago
Comment by IncreasePosts 2 hours ago
* by real, I mean large societies that aren't propped up by some bizarre economic quirk...eg maybe the sultan of brunei can personally pay for everyone bruneian citizen to get the best cancer treatment. But that's not a scalable solution
Comment by micromacrofoot 3 hours ago
Comment by contravariant 3 hours ago
Comment by NedF 3 hours ago
Comment by h33t-l4x0r 10 hours ago
Comment by vkou 10 hours ago
There are plenty of capitalist nations that provide public healthcare on a large spectrum of coverage and quality.
Comment by nxm 10 hours ago
Comment by pimterry 7 hours ago
Ahead of Canada, sure (they come worst here in both scenarios) but behind countries like the UK, Germany & the Netherlands that do have universal health care.
Comment by vjvjvjvjghv 7 hours ago
Comment by trinix912 9 hours ago
Comment by stinkbeetle 7 hours ago
"Aljin says treatment at their local hospital in the city of Cebu was slow, and she had messaged everyone she could think of for help."
The Philippines' constitution says access to healthcare is a human right. They have universal healthcare insurance, and public hospitals and medical centers.
The next one is the girl from Colombia. Colombia has a mostly public (with regulated private) healthcare system with universal health insurance.
The next one is from Ukraine. Ukraine has a government run universal healthcare system. Wikipedia tells me "Ukrainian healthcare should be free to citizens according to law," fantastic, but then it goes on, "but in practice patients contribute to the cost of most aspects of healthcare."
In first world countries with social healthcare systems like Canada and Germany and Australia, people with complex illnesses do not get coverage for unlimited treatments either, or general costs of being sick (travel, family carers, etc). There are many cases of fundraisers for, and charities which try to help, sick people in need in these countries.
Capitalism is not the reason not everyone with cancer is being cured and not chasing expensive treatments. Healthcare is something that you can throw unlimited money into. You'll get diminishing returns, but there will always be more machines and scans and tests and drugs and surgical teams and devices you can pay for. It doesn't matter the economic system, at some point more people will get more good from spending money on other things, and those unfortunate and desperate ones who fall through the cracks might have to resort to raising money themselves.
Comment by vkou 2 hours ago
This quality of service costs me and my wife ~$23,000/year.
Sure, we can walk into urgent care and get seen. I've also never had a problem walking into a walk-in clinic in Canada, either. The clinic's lobby and the doctor's car in the parking lot isn't as nice over there, though.
Comment by nickpp 9 hours ago
In capitalism it is easy and transparent: price, with the side effect of aligning society interests with those of the selfish individual.
Of course the strange and heavily regulated US health-care system is obviously far far away from a free market.
In socialism it's much more random: black markets, lists, lotteries, friends and network of connections. The side effect is that the most productive individuals are discouraged and punished, with the whole society lagging in effect.
Case in point: the EU that started lagging the USA so much in growth that ended up having to beg for basic defense when a blood-thirsty neighbor came hungry for land.
Comment by lawtalkinghuman 6 hours ago
Comment by nickpp 3 hours ago
Comment by Hikikomori 9 hours ago
Comment by sdoering 9 hours ago
And no, no lists, no lotteries or any of that other lies the conservative US media is spewing out to keep the masses pacified.
I strongly believe, that if US citizens were to experience German healthcare for a year and having to go back to the US system, that there would be riots. Because I don’t think anyone with first hand experience of both systems would ever want to return to the US system.
Comment by jack_tripper 8 hours ago
There definitely are lists. You don't just get the surgery or therapy you need the next day. You get the next free slot in the list of people queuing at the hospital/practice that still has free slots.
For example the first appointment you can get at my state funded therapist if you call today, will be in june. How is that "not a list"?
Or like, if you call most public GPs in my neighbourhood, they'll all tell you they're full and don't have slots to take on any new patients and you should "try somewhere else". How is that "not a list"?
Comment by withinboredom 7 hours ago
Comment by jack_tripper 6 hours ago
Anyway, do you not realize the fault with the system in your logic? Because if everything becomes urgent in order to bypass queues, then nothing is urgent anymore.
It doesn't fix the problem, you're just scamming the system to get ahead of the problem.
Comment by withinboredom 5 hours ago
For some other things, you can travel further away to where there is less demand for what you need, and if you're willing, you don't have to wait as long. These are all different "lines" and they're the ones doing the schedule.
Comment by jack_tripper 4 hours ago
Let's focus on the other part you said, "waiting 1 year" if it's not urgent. 1 year sucks no matter how you spin it around.
Comment by withinboredom 3 hours ago
Comment by nobody9999 1 hour ago
Except it doesn't. At least not in the United States. I have Peripheral Artery Disease.
I had two completely occluded arteries in my left leg and a third that was mostly occluded and had an aneurysm to boot.
One day, that third artery collapsed and I was left with zero blood flow to my left foot.
The doctor had me go to the Emergency Room to get testing and imaging to have surgery the following week.
He did not simply schedule surgery, as that would have required pre-approval from my insurance company and, in fact, the insurance company denied the claim and did not approve the procedure (which saved my foot) until six weeks later -- at which time I'd have had to have my foot amputated without the angioplasty and arterial bypass.
In fact, after surgery the insurance company continued to deny my claims and refused to authorize pain meds (they sliced my left leg open from my hip to my ankle and rooted around to use an existing vein to bypass the blockage on one of my arteries) for those same six weeks.
Oh yeah, US healthcare is so much better. /rolls eyes. My insurer would have forced me to wait until I required amputation if I hadn't just gone ahead on an emergency basis as suggested (because it's not unusual for that to happen) by the surgeon.
And in case you were wondering, yes I have private insurance and pay nearly $1200/month just for me. In fact, my deductible for next year just went up 20% and my annual out of pocket doubled, yet I'm still paying essentially the same premium.
No. The US healthcare system is completely fucked and I hope you don't die or lose important body parts learning that.
Comment by layer8 5 hours ago
Comment by jack_tripper 5 hours ago
If it's not lying then it's another word that ultimately still does the same outcome of putting you ahead of the rest.
Comment by withinboredom 5 hours ago
Comment by MandieD 7 hours ago
Even once I do hit the income threshold to switch back to private (switching back to fulltime work), I'm pretty sure I won't.
As far as doctor choice goes, I feel like I have more on the public insurance here (like 90% of the population) than I did with UHC in the early 2000's back in the US. I certainly have fewer financial surprises.
Comment by Alex_L_Wood 7 hours ago
Comment by stinkbeetle 7 hours ago
But you have lists, queues, lotteries, whatever you call it. That's not a lie. The fact you think lists are a vast right wing conspiracy demonstrates your government is not really forthcoming about your healthcare system. There are lists everywhere. There are ambulance wait times, hospital emergency wait times, various levels of urgent and elective treatment wait times. There are procedures and medicines and tests that are simply not covered at all.
Now, obviously USA has queues and lists too. And I could be wrong but I'm sure I've heard that US private insurance companies are notorious for not covering certain treatments and drugs as well. I don't know what it is exactly these right wing people are saying about healthcare, I thought they did not like the American "Obamacare" though.
Comment by trinix912 9 hours ago
Comment by b3ing 8 hours ago
the market / capitalism won’t correct itself, much people want to call it God/ perfect
Regulation, anti-trust laws try to correct somethings but many politicians are against those things because they limit the profit that can be made, profit first, that’s the corruption
Comment by KingMob 9 hours ago
> In socialism it's much more random: black markets, lists, lotteries, friends and network of connections. The side effect is that the most productive individuals are discouraged and punished, with the whole society lagging in effect.
Evidence: the vast majority of European countries who have socialized medicine and seem to be doing fine.
Comment by jack_tripper 8 hours ago
>Evidence: the vast majority of European countries who have socialized medicine and seem to be doing fine.
That evidence of socialism working well, only works as long as there are enough resources to cover the needs of most people, basically some of the wealthier European countries.
But when those resources become scarce due to poor economic conditions and/or mismanagement, then you'll see the endless queues, black margets and nepotism running the system.
Evidence: former European communist countries who experienced both systems and where in some, nepotism to bypass lists still work to this day.
Comment by intended 7 hours ago
Comment by jack_tripper 7 hours ago
Socialized systems don't work without abundance. How you generate that abundance is orthogonal to socialism since even countries that are wealthy on paper suffer from shortages and long waiting times in public healthcare leading to a gray-market of using connections to get ahead or more private use.
Comment by layer8 5 hours ago
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Comment by hermanzegerman 9 hours ago
But don't worry your free market friends are killing it right now, for tax reductions
https://www.wired.com/story/how-trump-killed-cancer-research...
Comment by nickpp 9 hours ago
Comment by hermanzegerman 9 hours ago
Comment by nickpp 3 hours ago
The benefits were already delivered by that strong and prosperous economy in form of products and services.
Taxation is of course necessary to fund government spending but we need to keep in mind its drawbacks: from discouraging productive activity and slowing economic growth to giving politicians funds to buy votes with populist social policies.
Comment by orwin 9 hours ago
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Comment by beepbooptheory 5 hours ago
Like, yes, we are discussing an "imperfection" here! You are the one that asserting the greater perfection, not the lesser.
Comment by KingMob 9 hours ago
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Comment by catlikesshrimp 8 hours ago
https://www.forbes.com/sites/danalexander/article/the-defini...
Most of his added wealth comes from "crypto" and name licensing.
Comment by impossiblefork 9 hours ago
Both actual capitalism, i.e. the bad thing, and this which can plausible be argued to be well-functioning market economies, are is often stabilized by adding elements of communism to the system-- publicly funded education, healthcare etc. This is one of the reasons why I as a vaguely socialism-influenced whatever I can reasonably be said to be see communism, i.e. a system characterized by the distribution principle "to each according to his need" as less revolutionary than the socialism distribution principle "to each according to his contribution". Communist distribution principles can coexist with ill-functioning market systems such as things which have degenerated into actual capitalism, whereas the socialist distribution principle can't.
Comment by wongarsu 8 hours ago
Comment by impossiblefork 5 minutes ago
I don't think your statement is true absolutely, I think it's very possible to have pure market economies that are quite well-functioning, i.e. not monopolies etc., where many people are very rich but with some people being really poor, even to the point of not being able to afford healthcare or healthcare insurance, so I don't think it's guaranteed to be true, though I think it's mostly true.
Comment by philipallstar 7 hours ago
The market is just reacting to the regulatory environment and all the political patches and shortcuts of same done to appease voters over the last 100 years. Fix that and the market will sort itself out.
Comment by MSFT_Edging 6 hours ago
“Bad news, detective. We got a situation.”
“What? Is the mayor trying to ban trans fats again?”
“Worse. Somebody just stole four hundred and forty-seven million dollars’ worth of bitcoins.”
The heroin needle practically fell out of my arm.
Comment by vjvjvjvjghv 8 hours ago
Comment by philipallstar 7 hours ago
You won't have to worry about distributing advanced cancer medications when they don't exist in the Communist version, because they weren't discovered. You can't fulfil a need with a drug you never risked a giant amount of funding and effort to discover.
Comment by impossiblefork 3 minutes ago
So I don't understand how your comment really relates to mine. My comment is basically me quibbling about terminology with the terms capitalism and market economy.
Comment by binary132 5 hours ago
Comment by philipallstar 5 hours ago
Comment by binary132 4 hours ago
Let’s also imagine the other side of the equation. Can you not imagine any penalty or cost other than bankruptcy? Let’s say you are forced to allocate $1 million per year to research. is the only cost function you can imagine based on the risk of default?
Comment by philipallstar 4 hours ago
Comment by somewhereoutth 8 hours ago
This allows decentralised decision making for large grained resource allocation - for example should we build a factory for shoes, or for toothbrushes? - and is a good thing, as central planning has been demonstrated to not work if applied to the whole economy. (the converse, no central planning to any of the economy, has also been demonstrated to not work!)
However that accumulation can be (and nowadays usually is) orchestrated by a corporate entity, which in an ideal world would be almost entirely beneficially owned by retirees on an equitable basis.
What has gone wrong, is that the benefits of productivity enhancements (since 1970?) have flowed to capital more so than to workers - which not least prevents them from forming capital themselves (savings/pensions), hence rising wealth inequality.
Comment by mlrtime 7 hours ago
Comment by nickpp 10 hours ago
Comment by hermanzegerman 9 hours ago
Comment by sdoering 9 hours ago
Yes, there is quite a bit to improve in the German system. No doubt there. But if I compare it to the abysmal situation in the richest country on this planet, I am left standing awestruck asking myself why. I really, genuinely cannot wrap my head around.
Comment by duskdozer 8 hours ago
[1]https://d3nkl3psvxxpe9.cloudfront.net/documents/econTabRepor... via https://truthout.org/articles/6-in-10-americans-back-medicar...
Comment by mlrtime 7 hours ago
Now maybe when I stop working that may be a different comparison. And its not like there is a choice, voting for a D doesn't magically get German healthcare.
Comment by lionkor 7 hours ago
Comment by _heimdall 7 hours ago
If the US were to shift to that model today, a country already heavily in debt would have to either take on more debt PR increase revenues in a manner that they wouldn't have been willing to in order to fund our already growing debts.
The debate over whether public or private healthcare is better is all well and good, but first we should be debating how the US would pay for it in the first place.
Comment by hermanzegerman 6 hours ago
Taking into account both the costs of coverage expansion and the savings that would be achieved through the Medicare for All Act, we calculate that a single-payer, universal health-care system is likely to lead to a 13% savings in national health-care expenditure, equivalent to more than US$450 billion annually (based on the value of the US$ in 2017). The entire system could be funded with less financial outlay than is incurred by employers and households
https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140-6...
Comment by _heimdall 4 hours ago
The healthcare industry in the US is massive and already full of corruption and inefficiency. Even if we are to assume giving politicians and bureaucracy more control over the system will reduce both issues, we can't predict how successful that will be.
Similar claims were made regarding the hopes for ACA reducing costs and here we are.
Comment by coredog64 4 hours ago
No, this is not Medicare Advantage, in which Medicare just directly pays private health insurance premiums for enrollees.
Comment by duskdozer 8 hours ago
Comment by hermanzegerman 6 hours ago
You need to show that it has a chance of working (literature etc...) and it will be reviewed by a doctor from the "Medical Service" which is independent from the Health Insurers.
If they decide it should be paid, it will be paid (which is most of the time the case).
Otherwise you can go through the social courts. (No court costs for the insured person. You can get a lawyer reimbursed if you're poor)
Comment by duskdozer 5 hours ago
Comment by hermanzegerman 4 hours ago
Especially within the University Hospitals who administer these treatments they already have the experience how to write these applications and know their counterparts
Comment by nickpp 9 hours ago
Comment by hermanzegerman 9 hours ago
Also we don't need "pre-auth" and other Bullshit before we start standard treatments.
The real death panels are sitting in your Insurance Companies Offices as seen by the news coverage around United Healthcare et al lately
Comment by nickpp 3 hours ago
Governments-paid treatments are god-sent but many times the funds are limited so they only cover older, cheaper treatments. Approval and funds for newer ones come so late, sometimes too late.
Germany has one of the most developed economies on the planet so naturally has more spend on healthcare. But that can change and when the money is tight, tough choices have to be made. I'd make those choices for myself rather than trust the State to do it for me.
Comment by throw-the-towel 9 hours ago
Comment by pavlov 9 hours ago
For comparison, the New York City public transport system (MTA) runs a deficit of about $3 billion. Six billion for universal healthcare in a country of 83.5 million people seems like a total bargain.
Comment by jacquesm 7 hours ago
Yes.
To help you think a bit more clearly: the health insurance system is not a for-profit system, even though some people mistakenly hold on to the idea that it should be. It is a risk spreading mechanism.
Comment by tiagod 6 hours ago
Comment by nickpp 3 hours ago
Comment by tiagod 3 hours ago
I live under a system where even very expensive treatments are covered by the state using taxpayer money, and I'm not starving. Sometimes you need to optimize for human dignity.
Comment by hermanzegerman 9 hours ago
The German Healthcare System also has some historically developed peculiarities that don't make much sense in today's age, but they are difficult to address without pissing people off (The duality of Private and Public Health Insurance, allowing the first one to get rich and very healthy people out of the risk pool, and then loopholes to switch back into the public system when they grow older and don't want to pay the then high prices in private insurance)
The Hospital Reform is already working to reduce costs by reducing the number of small hospitals, and concentrate them into bigger ones. (As a side effect, quality of care will increase too, since outcomes are correlated with experience)
Also more care will be shifted to outpatient setting.
Otherwise we are fighting with the demographic change. But these problems are also hurting all other developed nations including the US, where funding problems in Medicaid are also expected in the next decades
tl:dr We have problems due to the demographic change, but these are in line with other developed nations. There are some efforts to address them, but politicians are hesitant to do real reforms, because old people have the most voting power
Comment by jamdav16 9 hours ago
I have three second-hand cancer experiences from family here in Australia (Dad, Mum and my half-sister - under 35/yo). All three were detected early thanks to regular checkups and screening (covered under Medicare), treated in major hospitals (Dad was in a rural hospital, Mum and half-sister in Metro major city hospitals) and are all alive and certainly not in debt. The biggest cost was parking at the hospital, drinks from the vending machine and the PBS medication (all PBS medicine costs $31.60 for adults, and $7.70 for concessions).
Any PBS medication has the full-cost price printed on the label for reference, more often than not the printed prices go from $300 - $2,000, but I remember that these aren't the full price anyway since our government collectively bargains for cheaper prices on OS medication).
I can't imagine having to pay for treatment AND the insane full price of medications, it must be so much more stressful for families going through cancer treatment.
Americans, don't let the media and your government tell you otherwise. Universal healthcare is cheaper [0] and more effective than whatever archaic system you have now.
I am so god damn proud of our system in Australia, it's not perfect, but damn it's so efficient for critical care, thank heavens for Medicare and the PBS.
Oh and for those that say "well doctors aren't paid very well"... they are. My brother-in-law is a surgeon and he's doing pretty well for himself, bought a new Audi last month for his wife, heading to Europe for a month-long holiday with his family and just moved into a new house.
[0] https://data.worldbank.org/indicator/SH.XPD.CHEX.PC.CD?most_...
Comment by j-krieger 7 hours ago
Boy are you in for a ride. France will be first and Germany is on a good track for it within the next two decades.
Comment by naian 9 hours ago
Comment by ceejayoz 7 hours ago
The end of ACA subsidies is probably gonna collapse that approach.
Comment by acchow 8 hours ago
So then you would expect life expectancy in the US to be higher than in Germany, France, UK?
It is not.
Comment by tokioyoyo 9 hours ago
Comment by EdwardDiego 9 hours ago
Comment by ericjmorey 9 hours ago
Comment by exitb 9 hours ago
Comment by intended 7 hours ago
Even with waiting lists, people get healthcare. They get better health outcomes per $ spent. America can provide excellent cutting edge healthcare, which is especially great if you can afford it. At some point, you have to decide whether having most of the bell curve taken care of, is more / less important in terms of rhetoric and priority.
Comment by pjc50 7 hours ago
As we all know, American insurance companies never deny coverage, nor do you ever have to wait in an American hospital. /s
Comment by j-krieger 7 hours ago
Comment by Joker_vD 9 hours ago
It's all very well and dandy that you can say "actually, there is a larger structural problem underlying it all" when meeting something bad, but it doesn't make that particular bad disappear.
Comment by NamlchakKhandro 9 hours ago
You're absolutely right.
Comment by KingMob 9 hours ago
Comment by huijzer 8 hours ago
Comment by secretsatan 8 hours ago
Comment by bruce511 8 hours ago
Plus the phrase "cure" does a lot of heavy lifting. People seem to see a win here as being "here's a tablet, all cancer is gone."
So yes, we have spent an insane amount of money that can be ascribed to "cancer". (We've Also spent a lot on heart disease, diabetes and so on.)
But yes, we have got an extraordinary return on money spent. Treatments and survivability of common cancers (breast, prostate etc) have gone through the roof. Better screening, better education and much better Treatments lead to much (much) better outcomes.
Not all cancers are the same though. Some are harder to treat. Some rare ones are hard to investigate (simply because the pool is too small) but even rare cancers get spill-over benefits from common ones.
In terms of "cure" - that's not a word medicals use a lot anyway. Generally speaking we "manage" medical conditions, not cure them. "Remission" is a preferred word to an absence of the disease, not "cure".
In truth, we all die of something. Cancer is usually (not always) correlated with age, and living longer gives more opportunities to get cancer in the first place. So it's not like we can eradicate it like polio.
Comment by shawabawa3 8 hours ago
Just one example, prostate cancer today has a 90+% 10 year survival rate, in 1970 that was 25%
Comment by PurpleRamen 8 hours ago
Comment by HighGoldstein 8 hours ago
Comment by nicce 8 hours ago
Comment by meindnoch 7 hours ago
Comment by aaronharnly 8 hours ago
That’s not utterly transformative but I wouldn’t call it negligible either.
Comment by brador 8 hours ago
Replace the body.
The only fatal cancer in 2026 should be brain cancer.
Comment by meindnoch 7 hours ago
Comment by throwaw12 10 hours ago
Common pattern they had was:
- similar or same domains
- same messaging on their website
YouTube could have taken action, but it choose not to
Comment by jjcob 10 hours ago
Comment by pjc50 9 hours ago
However it's also a tricky business to be the adjudicator of what is and isn't a scam. You're going to have to deal with a lot of complaints from "legitimate businessmen".
Comment by tgsovlerkhgsel 10 hours ago
Comment by 1718627440 9 hours ago
... the crimes they actually make a lot of money from.
Comment by neilv 2 hours ago
They are not the brightest, just the ones who sold out others and grabbed the money, with ethics and morals not being sufficient personal barriers.
Calling them the brightest just feeds their belief that they merit the money, and they don't have to ask the real reason they have so much money.
Comment by felixyz 8 hours ago
Comment by xgulfie 3 hours ago
Comment by 1718627440 9 hours ago
Comment by binary132 4 hours ago
Comment by intended 7 hours ago
- People who want to work in tech because it was a stable and/or lucrative career
- People who just want/love to code
- People who loved tech / think tech is cool
There’s also a degree of counter-culture that used to be part of the mix, which got jettisoned as tech became mainstream and mapped out.
The current state of Tech is unpleasant and alarming.
Comment by Andrew_nenakhov 10 hours ago
Comment by zaphirplane 10 hours ago
Comment by LadyCailin 9 hours ago
Comment by phatfish 4 hours ago
Comment by rationalist 6 hours ago
I have a theory that it doesn't. Which set of companies' logic is more likely?:
Is LadyCailin a "tree-hugging liberal"? LadyCailin clicked on a lot of Sierra Club and PETA ads, so yes. Good, we will add LadyCailin to this list.
Is LadyCailin an "extremist right-wing nazi"? LadyCailin clicked on a lot of prepper and gold ads, so yes. Good, we will *also* add LadyCailin to this other list.
OR
Is LadyCailin a "tree-hugging liberal"? Well, they clicked on these ads, so we think so, but then they clicked on these other ads, so we're not sure. Then she clicked on these other ads, now we don't have any idea.
Speaking from personal experience: Because some people have used my phone number and email address as their own, I get emails for one political party and text messages for the other political party.
It doesn't make my ad profile useless to the people sending me ads.
Give your phone number to both U.S. political parties. Congratulations you will get spammed by both. I doubt they are cross-checking.
Comment by binary132 4 hours ago
Comment by CGamesPlay 10 hours ago
Comment by gmerc 9 hours ago
https://www.reuters.com/investigations/meta-tolerates-rampan...
Comment by deaux 6 hours ago
[1] https://www.amnesty.org/en/latest/news/2022/09/myanmar-faceb...
Comment by benchly 9 hours ago
Comment by nrhrjrjrjtntbt 10 hours ago
Comment by actionfromafar 10 hours ago
Comment by ryukoposting 5 hours ago
Here's Google's response:
We understand you are concerned about the content in question, but please note that Google's services host third-party content. Google is not a creator or mediator of that content. We encourage you to resolve any disputes directly with the individual who posted the content.
...which is a lie, among other things.Comment by oefrha 9 hours ago
Comment by throwaw12 10 hours ago
Comment by yalok 10 hours ago
Their incentives contradict healthy behavior… :(
Comment by throw310822 7 hours ago
Comment by BoredPositron 10 hours ago
Comment by eleveriven 8 hours ago
Comment by htrp 5 hours ago
Comment by gampleman 9 hours ago
Comment by cluckindan 9 hours ago
Laws can be based on ethics, but moral judgments really should not be involved in their application.
Unless you want to live in a theocracy, of course.
Comment by birktj 8 hours ago
Comment by doodlebugging 3 hours ago
By comparison it is pretty obvious that most societies have similar moral values - stealing is wrong, murder is wrong, charity is right, etc. in spite of the differences in religious interpretations that end up preventing so many of us from simply coexisting as equals.
To suggest that morals are tied to religion is simply wrong. Morals are simple rules that humans have developed over generations of interactions that allow them to apply reasonable judgements to fellow humans based on observations of how those fellow humans interact with strangers and kin.
Religions likely have as part of their foundations, an explicit acknowledgement or recognition of the societal mores that governed human interactions before any one of our ancestors invented or postulated out loud about phenomena that they all experienced but did not yet have the science or understanding of the natural world to reliably explain, thus compelling them to invent entities that controlled those phenomena. Those who chose to believe in these inventions could rest easier knowing that something somewhere was either looking out for them or they could be wary of angering that entity to prevent bad things from happening to them or their kin.
In short, morals and ethics exist outside of any religious dogma so the suggestion that they are a constraint imposed on any society through religion is simply inaccurate since it is not necessary for any person to be religious in order to hold another accountable .
Comment by cluckindan 2 hours ago
No one has suggested that. My comment about theocracies was referring to the way religious morals direct lawmaking in theocracies, leading to things like death penalties for homosexual acts and zero tolerance of religious critique (denial of freedom of expression and persecution of political opposition).
Comment by doodlebugging 1 hour ago
>Then again, maybe we should keep ethics and morals away from law and sentencing, and concentrate on harm and intent.
Morals, our value system developed by our own experiences that determine how we as individuals define right and wrong are the foundation of ethical boundaries that we impose on the groups that we form or join. Ethics are tied to morals.
Harm and intent are judgements that we make either as individuals or as group members when we look at actions and consequences (apply our moral and ethical guidelines) so that we can determine whether sanctions are necessary and reasonable based on our own shared value system.
Then you make a statement that appears to suggest that morals and ethics are unrelated when in fact, our individual morals form the foundation of ethical constraints that we impose on the groups in our societies just as they are the foundation for our religious value systems. In your either/or proposition here you apparently separate laws from morals. I disagree because laws, which follow from our own moral values and are just codified statements defining our own ethical framework so that we can all color between the same set of lines.
>Laws can be based on ethics, but moral judgments really should not be involved in their application.
Then you impose the burden of religion or theocracy with your last statement. This statement implies to the casual observer that since you reject morals (in the second statement) as a basis of laws in favor of laws based on ethics that those which are based on morals exist only under a theocratic framework. Since group ethics follow from shared individual mores this does not make sense.
>Unless you want to live in a theocracy, of course.
Morals, ethics, laws are entangled and require no religious framework for their application though as your examples demonstrate, it is possible to create a system where mores shared and recognized by all are subverted to serve a religious doctrine which is itself a permutation of an ethical system used to capture local groups and to impose a specific reward/sanction value system to aid compliance.
EDIT: I think that your use of "Unless" makes it easy for a reader to interpret the second statement as part of an IF/THEN type of statement implying a conclusion that you have defined in your third statement.
You're explicitly allowing ethics to form the basis of laws in the first part of your second statement and then using the "but" to disallow moral judgments as a basis. This is the IF part of the dialog.
The Unless follows and ends up defining the THEN part of the conclusion so that a reader can interpret your statements to conclude that IF ethics can be the foundation for laws THEN a system of laws based on moral judgments must form the basis for a theocratic system, of course.
Comment by cheschire 8 hours ago
Comment by cluckindan 6 hours ago
Law in a democratic society is a manifestation of so-called social contracts considered binding for members of that society.
However, law in a non-democratic society can be the complete opposite, to the point of enabling immoral conduct, including but not limited to legal crime, persecution of political opponents, ethnic cleansing and offensive warfare.
Comment by cheschire 6 hours ago
Morals are fundamental to the process.
Comment by cluckindan 2 hours ago
Could we even say laws are the society’s objective morals?
Comment by contravariant 3 hours ago
Comment by JumpCrisscross 3 hours ago
Retribution is a real component of justice. When it's ignored, people take the law into their own hands.
Harsher sentences for despicable crimes makes sense. Automatic sentence enhancers are cruel. But automatically giving the judge the power to sentence for longer based on the victim's profile is not.
Comment by wanderingmind 8 hours ago
Comment by _heimdall 7 hours ago
Comment by eleveriven 9 hours ago
Comment by Ozzie_osman 10 hours ago
https://jacobin.com/2023/02/israel-law-of-return-extradition...
Comment by colinb 5 hours ago
https://www.bbc.com/news/world-middle-east-55795075.amp
Though that case, returning an alleged, now convicted child rapist took decades.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Malka_Leifer_affair
As a not-Israeli Jew the reluctance of the Israeli government to send alleged criminals for trial overseas doesn’t make me happy, but I also remember that there are some reasons for this.
Comment by jsmith99 1 hour ago
Comment by cowpig 2 hours ago
Can't imagine how many people who work in law enforcement are furious with the current administration.
Comment by chaostheory 3 hours ago
Comment by lloydatkinson 9 hours ago
Comment by throwaway198846 9 hours ago
Comment by 55555 6 hours ago
Comment by morellt 2 hours ago
Comment by Foobar8568 5 hours ago
Comment by jack_tripper 6 hours ago
Same thing happened in my post communist country and the neighboring country too. Perp stole tens of millons through a banking scam in the 90s, then fled to Israel because he was Jewish and claimed persecution.
At which point should the pattern be acknowledged?
Comment by throwaway198846 6 hours ago
Comment by jack_tripper 6 hours ago
Comment by throwaway198846 5 hours ago
Comment by jack_tripper 5 hours ago
What was bad faith? I told you what happened. I was sarcastic because your comment was redundant and didn't add anything to the conversation, only instigating.
> and provide further information explore what happened
How does that change the situation? Are you the head prosecutor of Israel and looking to rectify the situation?
>what you think Israel should do differently?
Extradite them or put them in jail over there and stop being a safe heaven for criminals.
Comment by throwaway198846 5 hours ago
> How does that change the situation? Are you the head prosecutor of Israel and looking to rectify the situation?
You were claiming that many criminals abuse Israel extradition system to esapce the law. I was making (implicit) claim that there is nothing special about it and if there was abduance of such cases is merely because more people in your country had means to escape to Israel than to other places. As already explained you provided a sole lacking in information example and I wanted more.
And because you were being glib, I will be too, yes for all you know I am Israel's head prosecutor.
Comment by jack_tripper 4 hours ago
Oh, I'm sorry, is running a Google search too much?
Vladimir Gusinsky Russian media tycoon charged in 2000 with large-scale fraud tied to privatization of state assets. Arrested briefly in Russia, then fled to Spain and subsequently to Israel in 2001, where he obtained citizenship and lived for extended periods. Extradition requests (including from Russia via Greece and Spain) were denied or rejected; he used Israel as a safe haven.
Leonid Nevzlin Major Yukos oil company shareholder and executive. Charged in the early 2000s with embezzlement, tax evasion, fraud, and money laundering related to Yukos operations and privatization deals from the 1990s. Fled to Israel in 2003, granted citizenship; multiple Russian extradition requests denied by Israeli courts (e.g., in 2006 and 2008). Lived openly in Israel for decades.
Other Yukos-associated figures (e.g., Mikhail Brudno, Vladimir Dubov, and minor shareholders) Partners or shareholders in Yukos accused alongside Nevzlin and Mikhail Khodorkovsky of embezzlement, fraud, and tax-related crimes stemming from 1990s privatizations. Several fled to Israel in the mid-2000s, obtained citizenship, and avoided extradition; Israeli officials reportedly stated they would not extradite such oligarchs to Russia.
Ilan Shor (also spelled Ilan Șor), an Israeli-born businessman and politician. Involved in the 2014–2015 "theft of the century," a massive fraud and embezzlement scheme that siphoned approximately $1 billion (about 12–14% of Moldova's GDP) from three Moldovan banks through fraudulent loans and money laundering. Convicted in Moldova in 2017 (initially to 7.5 years, later increased to 15 years in absentia in 2023) for fraud and money laundering. Fled to Israel in 2019, where he has lived in exile, leveraging his Israeli citizenship (he was born in Tel Aviv). Israel has consistently refused or not acted on extradition requests from Moldova.
> I was making (implicit) claim that there is nothing special about it and if there was abduance of such cases is merely because more people in your country had means to escape to Israel than to other places.Yes, I'm sure it's nothing special and just a coinkidink why all these financial fraudsters flee to Israel and not to Sweden, Canada, Australia or Japan.
The reason this happens is Israel gives easy citizenship to people just based on being of Jewish heritage, so these Jewish fraudster from all over the world abuse this, make a big hit somewhere, then flee to Israel with their illicit wealth for citizenship and protection.
Comment by throwaway198846 3 hours ago
> Oh, I'm sorry, is running a Google search too much?
You are the one who made the claim is is your job to soppurt it and I don't need to start guessing which post Soviet country you are until I land on the right guy.
Ilan Shor now lives in Russia with Russian citizenship. As for the rest of them they need to be considered. Do Russia and Moldova have Extradition Treaty with Israel?
Comment by jack_tripper 3 hours ago
You don't have to guess. Search today is so good enough that you can just ask to give you "all the cases of Jewish financial fraudsters in Eastern Europe that fled to Israel". That's how I got those names. Do you think I have reserved space in my head for names I heard once 20 years ago?
>Do Russia and Moldova have Extradition Treaty with Israel?
How about you start Googling basic stuff for yourself and then tell us what you found out. I'll leave the conversation here to save my time and sanity since you're obviously just stringing people along in bad faith as you already made up your mind a long time ago and aren't interested in any productive debate or conversation so nothing I say will change your mind. It doesn't matter how many answers I'll give you, you'll just come up with more gochas and nitpicks.
Conversation and debate means "here's the information I found, here's my opinion about it, tell me what your opinion is", and NOT "go find me the information that I'm requesting, then come back to me so I can give you my opinion on it".
Comment by throwaway198846 1 hour ago
Comment by mikerbrt2000 10 hours ago
I saw this ad a few months ago on YouTube and flagged it as a scam when I couldn’t find much information about the company. Never donate money through random sites. If you use platforms like https://www.gofundme.com/, at least you have the option to file a complaint if you find something suspicious.
Comment by Nextgrid 10 hours ago
They haven’t scammed nor inconvenienced a rich, well-connected person, so unlikely anything will happen. Remember that online fraud is effectively legal (10% of Meta’s revenue is from scam ads by their own estimates) as long as you only target the poor.
These scam campaigns have been going for years with people operating in the field across many countries - if there was an incentive to stop this it would’ve been done already, but since everyone’s making money why bother?
> file a complaint if you find something suspicious
Which will be piped to /dev/null, just like reporting scams on social media.
Comment by intended 6 hours ago
If you have content which is removed, or a moderation decision you wish to dispute, you can go to one of these bodies to get it reviewed. It cannot go to dev/null.
This doesn’t address whether flagging scams resulted in action. The bigger picture is the mismatched incentives for tech. Platforms are not quite incentivized to care about responding to user complaints, and do not give out information that lets us know what is happening independently.
To get to the point that complaints are actioned, those incentives need to be realigned. The ODS pathway, if used more frequently, increases that revenue and market pressure.
The ODS system is new, and I expect it will have tons of issues to discover. I wouldn’t be surprised it it is already weaponized.
On the flip side, platforms haven’t been tested or queried in this manner before.
Comment by spiderfarmer 10 hours ago
Comment by ChrisMarshallNY 9 hours ago
https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/news/1536/cpsprodpb/b676/live/3589b...
Comment by juliusceasar 2 hours ago
Comment by hearsathought 1 hour ago
Comment by Pesthuf 2 hours ago
Comment by juanparati 6 hours ago
In this book an old NGO worker explain very well how it work the business: https://books.google.dk/books/about/Blanco_bueno_busca_negro...
Comment by peanutz454 11 hours ago
Comment by teekert 11 hours ago
Comment by zwnow 11 hours ago
Comment by CrossVR 11 hours ago
They're easy to recognize, because they're very forceful in their begging, relying more on intimidation than compassion.
There really is no level people won't sink to for some money.
Comment by 1718627440 10 hours ago
Once you meet a real poor, it's obvious. You meet them outside of reasonable business hours, they are obviously a native, ashamed to ask for help and actually like to have a conversation.
Comment by mordae 7 hours ago
Some are genuine. People who went into debt, with health issue that prevented them from ever repaying it, fleeing from families so as not to burden them...
Smugglers who were found out, left with an unpayable amount of debt while the politicians that used to protect them went without punishment.
Comment by trinix912 9 hours ago
The actual homeless people here have access to government support and shelters, those beggars don't as they're not here legally.
Comment by devsda 6 hours ago
This always reminds me of the Sherlock Holmes short story - The man with the twisted lip
> They're easy to recognize, because they're very forceful in their begging, relying more on intimidation than compassion.
This is very common in India. These so called beggars harass and target people at their weakest and happiest moments like at funerals or birth of a child, wedding or housewarming parties. I've heard of these people earning enough to own houses in multiple cities.
Comment by nrhrjrjrjtntbt 10 hours ago
Comment by bell-cot 9 hours ago
Comment by Pooge 11 hours ago
However, if you give a homeless person money and they go buy drugs, I think you effectively made them poorer. I would advise giving them food instead.[2]
[1]: Word in quotes because there is no way to verify their identities.
[2]: I've literally seen a person asking for money get offered free fries at McDonald's and denying them. Beggars don't get to be choosers.
Comment by nrhrjrjrjtntbt 10 hours ago
Comment by Pooge 10 hours ago
I would personally prefer to give money to someone that needs it to eat.
Comment by nrhrjrjrjtntbt 9 hours ago
Outside of drugs and drink they can spend it how they like. They choose the food or maybe save for a hotel night.
Comment by latexr 10 hours ago
Sometimes a homeless person needs a blanket, or a bus ticket, or just a safe place for a few hours.
If you don’t want to give money, that’s your prerogative, but don’t simply assume food. Ask.
Comment by Pooge 10 hours ago
However, understand the context: the beggar entered a McDonald's and asked clients that were currently eating for money. He got offered the fries of a woman who didn't finish them. So there was no poisoning (I think this is very much an American problem, where I don't live) possible—except if you consider McDonald's to be poison in the first place.
In my experience, people don't give cash to beggars anymore. Everyone has their reason, but I think the fact that a lot of beggars were not really in need hasn't helped. But I think many would be open to give food or donate useful objects instead (which they don't have at hand when being begged).
Comment by latexr 10 hours ago
Consider the beggar’s context too. How many times per day/week must they go into that McDonald’s? Leftover fries are probably what they get offered the most. You can accept it a few times, but after a while they provide neither pleasure nor sustenance.
> In my experience, people don't give cash to beggars anymore.
Anecdotally, seems about right.
> But I think many would be open to give food or donate useful objects instead (which they don't have at hand when being begged).
Again, I agree, but I don’t think anyone asks either. One possible workaround would be to donate to your local food bank or another organisation you trust, then when asked by a beggar direct them there. Though that could be another can of worms depending on where one lives.
Comment by lambdaone 6 hours ago
Comment by trollbridge 5 hours ago
Comment by Pooge 10 hours ago
The person denied the fries without adding anything and left. This makes everyone who heard that the beggar didn't need food. Otherwise he'd have asked for something else (even food from the supermarket nearby).
Comment by trollbridge 5 hours ago
He took the bag, waited until I wasn’t looking, then set it down on the sidewalk and walked away. He was not interested in food, nor was he hungry.
Comment by thorawaytrav 7 hours ago
You say "Ask"? I did. I just heard some rehearsed story Oh, your son is sick?" With what exactly? What kind of drugs he need, I can help? Result -> anger. I get more aggression from asking and trying to get helpfull than simply saying "no." I have tons of examples.
Why do they NEVER ask for a job? Why don't they ever offer to do the manual labor I was doing? I would be glad to let them do it and pay for it.
One time they stole my phone. A guy just came near me with a sign, put it on the table while begging, and simply garbed it and have runned away. That was end of I line for me.
Why do they reek of alcohol or drugs?
I used to offer help to people, but after they stole my phone, I just scream "NO." I never want to be stolen from again. I donate to some charities, but that is the end of the line for me. I don't want to pay a guy that is begging out of habit just to buy drugs. I don't want to pay women sedating their children or using them on the street just to earn money. Just watching them beg behind the building.
My main point is that I never could understand the aggression towards the homeless until I was stolen from. My street was filled with alcoholics living in cars, screaming random stuff, and fighting with passersby and each other.
Do you really think they want an answer, or anything else other than buying their drugs? I was really hating people like me, but in the end I was discovered why do they react with defense and aggression. But of course I would be glad to pay for food nonetheless and try to help with anything expect money and I pay for charities that try to provide medical healthcare in places like Gaza, but I don't believe that people in London (for example) need more and places like Gaza.
Comment by sincerely 11 hours ago
Comment by Pooge 11 hours ago
Comment by ChrisMarshallNY 10 hours ago
I’m old enough to remember the Moonies with flowers at the airport[0].
[0] https://youtu.be/Ls_qFlF2gHw?si=znZJsjki-QLq5J1A (this actually was inspired by real behavior)
Comment by zwnow 11 hours ago
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Comment by Pooge 11 hours ago
So if you give them food directly, you're certain where your money goes. You also eliminate the false homeless people (similar to the example I gave).
Comment by auggierose 11 hours ago
Comment by Pooge 11 hours ago
Comment by latexr 10 hours ago
Did anyone ask what the money was for? Did anyone offer to buy whatever it was they needed, even if a meal at a better place? Or was the interaction to simply offer fries (probably the least filling, cheapest, far from healthy choice that they likely have been offered dozens of times already) and then do nothing when they refused?
Comment by Pooge 10 hours ago
Which isn't their strategy because the beggar spent probably 2 minutes in the restaurant.
It's not rare to see a beggar ask for money to "get food", get offered food and then decline.
Comment by DaSHacka 10 hours ago
lol more like whatever keeps their heroin dealer warm
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Comment by zwnow 8 hours ago
This is such an uneducated and entitled comment just showing how little regular people know about this situation in Germany. Its also one of the most commonly used arguments on this topic and its simply not true. Homeless shelters are overcrowded and extremely unhygienic. Our infrastructure isn't made for an ever-growing amount of homeless people. Law, rights and reality sadly grow appart heavily. "Die Tafel" is completely overwhelmed too. This statement might have been true 15 years ago but you should re-educate yourself on the topic.
Comment by jack_tripper 8 hours ago
It's not just the hygiene. it's that in those shelters you're constantly surrounded by a few mentally ill and possibly violent people who will lash out in unpredictable ways and make life worse for everyone with their constant tics and noises making you live in constant anxiety.
If you're homeless but not mentally ill yet, then being in such an environment everyday will definitely negatively affect your sanity as your daily struggle becomes surviving the shelter, instead of working to getting back on your feet. Kind of like being locked up in a prison but from which you can leave.
So then no wonder a lot of homeless people feel safer and less stressed just living and sleeping in public areas than in shelters.
Comment by trollbridge 4 hours ago
They are usually not full either. However they have a strict no drugs, no alcohol, and no fighting policy. That means a lot of people aren’t interested in going to them.
Comment by ktallett 11 hours ago
This isn't for you as you do plenty but incase others read this, but if you happen to ever see a thick coat in a charity shop, second hand store, or thrift store (whatever you call it) and it is quite cheap, do buy it as there are many charities that take them to give to homeless people.
Comment by astura 5 hours ago
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Comment by KingMob 9 hours ago
I'll take "Things That Never Happened" for $200, Alex.
Comment by Loughla 6 hours ago
And he stood up out of the wheelchair and walked to his Mercedes and drove away and that's why I never give to homeless people (or formal charities).
Comment by lambdaone 6 hours ago
https://metro.co.uk/2017/02/20/gang-of-beggars-pictured-gett...
I look forward to you donating that $200 to a homeless charity, KingMob.
Comment by rationalist 6 hours ago
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Comment by mlrtime 7 hours ago
I always tell people to donate as local as possible. Ideally local Shelters, Churches (that take in everyone) etc...
Comment by kakacik 11 hours ago
Comment by bragh 11 hours ago
Anyway, yes, direct donation is always better, be it to some random guy down on his luck in the street (unless they have just missed their bus and need ticket money for the next one and so for 3 years in the same bus station) or to some trusted person/group who actually does deliver the stuff to the area. Way too many random NGOs have popped up in Europe promising to do good things, just transfer money to their bank account and they will take care of it all for you.
Comment by account42 9 hours ago
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Comment by throwfaraway135 10 hours ago
Which could also include a QR code going to a gov website with details why this org was given the certification.
This isn't perfect but would certainly lower such incidents.
Comment by uxx 10 hours ago
Comment by worldsavior 6 hours ago
Do you know how many scammers are from India? Do you know how many scammers are from the US? Jeffery Epstein was from the US, is every US citizen now a pedophile?
How the country origin is related to them being scammers? They're scammers because they're shitty people, it's not related where they're from.
Comment by throwaway198846 9 hours ago
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Comment by isolli 10 hours ago
France cancer fraud trial begins (1999) [0] (the head of the charity was found guilty, imprisoned, and fined)
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Comment by marcusb 2 hours ago
But, of course, you know that, but you would rather dig and (try to) play semantic games than admit you are wrong. Do better.
Comment by SilverElfin 12 hours ago
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Comment by trollbridge 4 hours ago
Since that’s what they did to their victims.
Comment by kakacik 11 hours ago
There are many existing punishments - go after all their wealth, family and connected business, trusts etc. Simply ban them from western financial world. Publicly shame them and make their name a curse to spit on. Properly harsh jail and making sure all inmates know who arrived, I wouldn't expect kinder treatment than pedophiles get. And so on.
Comment by Shuddown 11 hours ago
Comment by Boogie_Man 5 hours ago
"To be shot" murmured Alyosha, lifting his eyes to Ivan with a pale, twisted smile."
"Bravo!" Cried Ivan delighted.
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Comment by chinathrow 9 hours ago
These monsters.
Comment by WesolyKubeczek 9 hours ago
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Comment by otikik 9 hours ago
And you are less likely to be killed by a mob, as a bonus.
Comment by ktallett 11 hours ago
Comment by ck2 6 hours ago
If we are going to have cancer stories and gun violence stories daily in the news, shouldn't the kids dying be a daily coverage?
Credit to BBC who every few weeks does show the kids dying in the hospital but US news does not mention it anymore since the summer
Still dying. More in 2026. Even more in 2027. Even more in 2028.
Even if USAID is restored in 2029 it will take awhile to rebuild and all those dead kids aren't coming back ever.
Oh and they didn't just quietly die. They suffered for weeks, months and died
Musk did that. But yeah keep using X and buying his cars
Comment by myth_drannon 7 hours ago
Comment by Loughla 6 hours ago
Where are you seeing the hate?
Comment by deaux 6 hours ago
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Comment by EvgeniyZh 11 minutes ago
The author of the question appears to have some information I don't (unless he made it up of course), so I asked him to share it
Comment by djohnston 55 minutes ago
Comment by hearsathought 1 hour ago
Another one? How many charity scams are "jews" involved in?
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Comment by netsharc 9 hours ago
Huh, maybe people can ask for donations to be cured of that "cancer"...
Comment by flanked-evergl 6 hours ago
Comment by netsharc 5 hours ago
Your convictions are as extremely deluded as a Palestinian suicide bomber's, to my ears.
Comment by flanked-evergl 5 hours ago
Comment by netsharc 3 hours ago
But with the wonderful world of the Internet, we can find anything as "proof" that anything we claim is true. Want to see proof that the earth is a flat sphere? I can do that. Tons of videos and blogs from nutjobs out there. If you want to find proof about 10000 raped and killed children, I bet you can find blogs and tweets from Elon Musk's soup of shit.
Ironically I'll trust linked ChatGPT or Gemini responses more than tweets and blogs (but not from Grok, an AI that claims Elon Musk is more athletic than LeBron James). But I bet you already know that these AI systems are censored to not tell the world about those things you already know is happening, because these systems are controlled by the man!
Show me you're not an white-supremacist extremist nutjob...
Comment by orwin 9 hours ago
By the way, indiscriminately bombing children seems to be more acceptable than opening fire on them for some reason, so maybe Israel military should stick to its guns.
Comment by cindyllm 10 hours ago
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Comment by almosthere 2 hours ago
But the one with an Isreal narrative blows up. You're so captured.
Comment by LocalH 1 hour ago
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Comment by almosthere 2 hours ago
When people are unable to engage with an argument this is what they do.
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