The reality is that these crazy women fulfilled the objective of the government and the media outlets that work for them by distorting information for the public.
Yesterday was an important day because Luigi's case was being presented again; evidence would be suppressed and legal matters would be called into question. However, the attention, the headlines, and the front page were all about "the Mangionistas."
Outside the courthouse, there are always many people. I've seen doctors, nurses, people who are victims of the insurance company, etc. And the media always seeks to interview the same unstable people. They do it because they know they're going to put their foot in it; they don't even need to ask them questions. They themselves overshadow the true message of a fight against corruption in the healthcare industry, in collusion with the government and the justice system, which look the other way every time an American citizen suffers negligence from insurance companies.
An absent state and judicial system that neither regulates nor protects the basic right of an American: the right to access quality healthcare..
Instead of uniting and questioning the state's neglect and the inefficiency of the justice system, society is fighting amongst themselves, widening the ideological divide between right and left.Health is an issue that affects all levels of society; it transcends political ideology and social class. We all have the right to life.
The “Luigi case” should serve as a catalyst for debate on corruption, medical negligence, and access to healthcare. It highlights the urgent need to reform a healthcare and judicial system that has failed to protect its citizens for decades, yet media coverage transforms the issue into a spectacle or an ideological conflict.
someone said: "don't lose the thread".














