Attachment B to Commonwealth v. Myles King Second Supplemental Motion to Dismiss has been released. Read it here:
Trigger Warning for Offensive Content:
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Someone needs to get Lucky an attorney and sue the absolute shit out of @MafiaMasshole for publicly claiming he's a pedophile. Absolute trash human being.
Thank you team for finding the show and screening it for me whilst I do patriotic shit!
92222 introducing you to Oz (Watch at your own risk) shown Sept 22
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My wife and I own Forest Park Pharmacy, and we don't accept insurance. None of it. That decision is exactly why we could fix what happened to a patient today.
A family came in wanting to transfer their kid's antibiotic to us. The child had already STARTED the course. Then, mid-treatment, the insurance company decided the last 14 tablets suddenly needed a "prior authorization" before the other pharmacy could hand them over. A sick kid, halfway through an antibiotic, and the answer was "please hold."
The drug is linezolid. It's a generic. It's been generic for over a decade. It treats serious gram-positive infections — the kind you do NOT want to stop antibiotics in the middle of, because an interrupted course is how you breed resistant bugs and end up right back where you started.
So why the hold-up on a cheap, common generic? Follow the fake math.
Insurance and the PBMs behind them price drugs off a number called AWP — "Average Wholesale Price." People in my industry have another name for it: "Ain't What's Paid." It's a benchmark number, not a real-world cost. On paper, the AWP for just those last 14 tablets is about $2,500.
My cash price for the same 14 tablets? $18.
Read that again. The system that's supposedly "protecting" this family from cost is the same system that inflated an $18 medication into a $2,500 line item, then slapped a prior auth on it to "review the expense" THEY invented. They manufactured the problem, then billed everyone for the privilege of solving it — and made a sick kid wait while they did it.
This is the whole game. When a drug is priced honestly, there's nothing to "manage." When it's priced off a fantasy benchmark, you get spread pricing, PA paperwork, pharmacy phone trees, and delayed treatment — all dressed up as cost control.
Here's the part nobody tells you: roughly 90% of prescriptions are low-cost generics. For the vast majority of what people pick up every day, running it through insurance does two things — raises the real cost and risks delaying your care. That's it. That's the value-add.
That's why we fired the insurance companies. No middleman deciding your kid can't finish their antibiotics on schedule. No fake prices. Just the real number, on the shelf, today.
The medication was always cheap. The insurance was the expensive part.
🚨 JUST IN: The MLB has BACKED DOWN, DECLINES to fine the Giants players after they wore Bible verses on the LGBTQ pride caps
"The players were neither fined nor disciplined, nor will they ever be." — letter to Sen. Josh Hawley
The MLB ADMITS they screwed up.
NEVER BACK DOWN when defending the religious freedom of Christians!
HUGE blunder by the MLB that this even became an issue. Christians won't take it!
Had a very contentious interview with @GretchenVoss64 this morning for a Boston Magazine article in August. It's clear that it's going to be a hit piece on Karen Read, because she can't get over the fact that her corrupt friends were unsuccessful in their attempt to lynch an innocent woman. I'll be publishing a story about our interview shortly.
Asmongold explains why entire industries are built to keep problems unsolved instead of fixing them
“I went into the oncology building when my dad had cancer, and the bathroom alone made the Hilton look like a joke. Oak walls, paintings everywhere, chairs that belonged in Buckingham Palace. There’s such a massive institution built around treating cancer that you start to wonder how many of these people lose their job the day it actually gets cured.”
“It’s the same as dentistry. Imagine if you could just regrow a tooth, think about how much less work dentists would have. It’s like how calculators used to be actual people doing math, then we built the machine, and all those people had to go find another job.”
“Look at hair loss, it’s a three to five billion dollar industry. Every few years you hear they found the one gene that stops hair loss, and then you never hear about it again. Once you see it, you realize how much money is invested into creating problems so somebody can sell you the solution.”
A shark was seen swimming close to beachgoers in Panama City Beach, Florida, prompting a woman to scream from a nearby hotel, warning people to run before the shark eventually swam away.