Big Buildings. Bigger Lies
Where do Your premiums really go?
Ever notice how all the biggest skyscrapers in your city belong to banks and insurers?
From Manhattan to Miami, Tokyo to Toronto, the tallest buildings don’t belong to teachers, firefighters, or families. They belong to insurance companies and banks. Towering glass temples to profit. Each one paid for not with good service or a reputation for fairness, but with decades of collected premiums and denied claims.
Think about Lisa, a single mother in Baton Rouge. After Hurricane Ida ripped the roof off her house, she filed her claim right away. She followed every rule, submitted every form, answered every call. But weeks turned into months. The excuse? Wind damage vs. water damage. Then they ghosted her. Lisa and her kids had to live in a mold-infested house for over a year. Meanwhile, her insurance company opened a new luxury office in Dallas. With a rooftop bar.
This isn’t a bug in the system. This *is* the system.
But we can flip the power. That’s what Inssux is built for. A new model—one where policyholders have the leverage. Where decentralized insurance puts the power back in the hands of the people who actually pay the premiums. Not executives. Not shareholders. You.
The skyscrapers may cast long shadows—but they won’t block out the truth much longer.
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