FYI, his family is wealthy. They own a country club in Maryland. Not that I'm opposed to crowd-funding his defense. I think it would send another message that the greedy health insurance companies need to hear loud and clear.
In my experience, a fair amount of "rich kids" in the millenial and gen z age range are pretty disillusioned with the system. They might not have come to their conclusions through struggle and inequality. But got there because of empathy.
I think that it has to do with how they were taught in school and when they were young. They grow up on values of kindness and generosity and then, in young adulthood, realize they have benefitted from other peoples labor. The internet and a trend towards more self-awareness probably contribute.
That certainly isn't the case for all rich kids. Most of them are oblivious assholes. But I've met a few.
I had that impulse but its obviously a less usual thing. Was just thinkint about that stuff that said McKinsey only hires rich kids, and like thinking as a rich kid at that fart factory, "God it sucks to be this shitty"
They can be better than that and I applaud those of them who do so regardless of their past motivations or character.
There's a lot of speculation, but his Twitter banner was an x-ray of a bunch of screws in his spine, and his reading list included a lot of books about backpain.
There are ways to do it, most of them tracked to prevent the funding of terrorism and crime.
Bringing a suitcase full of cash into the country isn't going to work, either. They'll just seize it at the border.
You could always go to the effort to establish a charity, but I'm not a US citizen so I don't know enough about what's allowed or available with respect to what qualifies something to be a charity.
Maybe if you make it a "Christian" organization dedicated to providing legal defence to "wayward souls" or something?