Health insurance companies invest billions in fast food chains
(NaturalNews)
Did you ever wonder how health insurance companies drum up future
business? It's easy: Just invest in companies whose products cause
chronic degenerative disease, driving people towards more health care
needs and therefore more health insurance.
And that's exactly what the health insurance industry is doing. A new article published in the American Journal of Public Health reveals that U.S. and Canadian health insurance giants own nearly $2 billion worth of stock in fast food giants like McDonald's, Burger King, KFC, Taco Bell and others.
So
profits made by health insurance companies are reinvested in industries
that make people sick and diseased, bringing them back to buy more
health insurance down the road. It's a pretty clever business model for
an industry that seems focused on the almighty dollar and obviously has
no concern whatsoever for the actual health status of its customers. If
anything, these health insurance companies hope you get sicker!
Corporate conspiracy to keep you sick and diseased
These
unholy alliances among corporate giants that conspire to keep you sick
are more common than you think. In addition to health insurance
companies owning billions of dollars worth of shares in fast food
companies, pharmaceutical companies now own major shares of popular
vitamin companies -- the ones that produce the cheap, useless chemical
vitamin supplements sold at places like Wal-Mart and Walgreens.
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