BareFootPilot
14.3K posts

BareFootPilot
@BarePilot
Space and Tesla supporter, Flying barefoot, Sailing, and Grandchildren My stream of consciousness P.S. If I don't respond to your DM don't take it personally


STOP what you're doing and help expose this "nonprofit"! It's Delta Dental - and the CEO's pay jumped from $4.5 million per year to $48 million over 4 years: “Delta Dental is considered a non-profit, and as such you can be their taxes online. So I got curious in their 2014 filing, the IRS requests for the organization's top accomplishments. Delta Dental reported that over 95% of claims electronic, online and paper were processed without any manual intervention. That means when your care is denied, there is less than 1 in 10 chance a human reviewed it That same year, Delta dished out up to a 30% pay cut on the care that doctors deliver, and for a decade, they did not raise what they pay for your dental care by a single penny. Meanwhile, their CEO's salary skyrocketed. She went from 4.5 to $15 million a year. From 2014 to 2018, she made off with almost $48 million before leaving her position. That's a million dollars a month. Must be nice. And she's not even a clinician. She's a CPA. You don't have to be an accountant to do the math. Dr. Pay cuts stagnant reimbursements. They were never about saving patients money on premiums.” REPOST this everywhere! #thinblueline #lawenforcement

Oregon has gone full-blown COMMUNISM. We've NEVER seen anything like this. On a quiet stretch of 170 acres in Eagle Point, Oregon, a defiant standoff over something as simple as rain turned into a legal storm. In Oregon, all water is considered publicly owned... even the rain that falls on your roof and the snow that melts into your soil. But Gary Harrington wasn’t willing to accept that. Determined to take control of the water landing on his own land, he constructed three reservoirs to capture rainwater and snowmelt, intending to use it for himself and as a safeguard against wildfires. The state intervened, ordering him to drain the reservoirs. Harrington refused. What followed was swift and severe: 30 days behind bars, nine misdemeanor convictions, and a $1,500 fine. Harrington’s stance was simple: it’s rain that fell on my land. Oregon’s position was just as clear: all water belongs to the public. In the end, the law sided with the state — and Oregon won. This is beyond crazy. REPOST this absolutely everywhere. #thinblueline #Lawenforcement















