Just got off the phone with my college roommate.
His daughter was diagnosed with leukemia in January.
He has insurance. Good insurance. The kind you feel safe having.
7 months later:
Savings: wiped out. 401k: cashed early. Penalties and all. House: refinanced to cover the gaps insurance decided weren’t their problem.
He told me he’s not the same person anymore.
Said watching your child fight for her life while simultaneously fighting an insurance company over coverage codes does something to you that doesn’t go away.
They did everything right.
Two incomes. No debt. Responsible their whole lives.
One diagnosis undid all of it in 7 months.
And somewhere a health insurance CEO is getting a $30 million bonus this quarter.
I don’t know how people defend this system with a straight face.
I really don’t.
As Pride Month draws to a close, I want people to remember that the "trans agenda" is to create a world where Charlotte could've been happy, and where this kind of tragedy never happens again.
When Melissa Benoist was cast as Supergirl, the show faced significant backlash upon release. Then Sasha Calle took on the role faced similar criticism and now Milly Alcock as super girl is being heavily targettedd.
The issue isn’t with the actresses themselves. It seems some men simply can’t accept or handle women with superpowers, and resort to bullying as a result