Notorious Journalist Fired In Connection To CEO Shooter

Notorious Journalist Fired In Connection To CEO Shooter

Taylor Lorenz, the high-profile tech journalist formerly of The Washington Post and Vox Media, has found herself at the center of yet another media firestorm following her comments about the assassination of UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson.

Lorenz’s remarks, which appeared to sympathize with public outrage against healthcare executives, have cost her a distribution partnership with Vox Media, marking another abrupt career shift for the embattled reporter.

The controversy erupted after Lorenz penned an essay for her newsletter, User Mag, in which she sought to contextualize—and, critics say, justify—the wave of dark humor and public anger surrounding Thompson’s death.

“If you have watched a loved one die because an insurance conglomerate has denied their life-saving treatment as a cost-cutting measure, yes, it’s natural to wish that the people who run such conglomerates would suffer the same fate,” Lorenz wrote.

Lorenz’s essay, titled Why “We” Want Insurance Executives Dead, tapped into frustrations with the U.S. healthcare system. She cited data showing UnitedHealthcare denies an outsized percentage of claims—32%, double the industry average—and highlighted the personal toll of such practices. “People have very justified hatred toward insurance company CEOs because these executives are responsible for an unfathomable amount of death and suffering,” she

https://twitter.com/EricLDaugh/status/1866208847289032817?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw%7Ctwcamp%5Etweetembed%7Ctwterm%5E1866208847289032817%7Ctwgr%5E8e2469598853133f036a8443126bcde9a706c8c6%7Ctwcon%5Es1_c10&ref_url=https%3A%2F%2Ftrendingpoliticsnews.com%2Fnew-notorious-journalist-fired-for-connection-to-ceo-shooter-mace%2F

The essay included firsthand accounts from patients and families affected by UnitedHealthcare denials, lending weight to Lorenz’s argument. Still, critics contend that framing such frustrations amid a real-life tragedy was, at best, tone-deaf.

On Saturday, Lorenz reaffirmed her stance, stating she supported those calling for the execution of healthcare CEOs.

WATCH:

Related Posts

Shadows Behind the Gold

The room froze when she finally spoke. Not about medals, records, or magazine covers—but about the children who stopped calling, the holidays spent counting the empty chairs….

Final Song Fades Quietly

The news broke like a silent shatter. Eric Carmen, the voice behind so many aching anthems, slipped away in his sleep at 74, leaving fans stunned and…

Shadows Behind the Spotlight

The crowd never heard her scream. Years before the posters and platinum records, there was a hospital bed, an empty pill bottle, and a teenage girl who…

Silent Stage, Shocking Goodbye

The announcement stopped the world cold. One moment, she was the familiar glow in our living rooms; the next, whispers of unthinkable news spread like wildfire. Fans…

Silent End to a Shining Life

Her final night was quiet. No sirens, no struggle, just an invisible poison filling a room where a legend slept. By morning, a supermodel who once commanded…

Whispers Around The Obamas

The internet was convinced they’d cracked it. A missing spouse here, an empty seat there, and suddenly the Obama marriage was on the brink of collapse. Comment…