The Info Underground

Ancillary Evidence Repository => Economics, Money/Banking, Investments, Profiteering => Topic started by: yankeedoodle on April 29, 2014, 08:13:45 PM

Title: When bankers jump, who gets the insurance money?
Post by: yankeedoodle on April 29, 2014, 08:13:45 PM
Ever hear of "dead peasant" insurance?  It's where large companies have life insurance policies on their lowly - i.e. disposable - employees, so that when the employees die, the company gets the insurance pay outs, and the employees family gets nothing.  Of course, this is the reason why the companies don't give the employees health insurance, because 1) it costs money and 2) it stops them from dying, which earns the company money.
http://deadpeasantinsurance.com/

Here's a report that suggests that the banks have a huge amount of policies on their staff and that raises the suspicion that all these bankers that are suddenly dying are very profitable to the banks.
http://rt.com/usa/155712-martens-policies-deaths-jpmorgan/?utm_source=browser&utm_medium=aplication_chrome&utm_campaign=chrome






Title: Re: When bankers jump, who gets the insurance money?
Post by: Idaho Kid on April 30, 2014, 12:30:36 AM
I thought it was called Walmart insurance?  Anyhow, I guess they need the dough to pay for the hit and clean up with a few crumbs sprinkled to da media.