President Trump made us a promise. A promise to drain the swamps. The workers comp swamp is the deepest swamp needing drained.
SUMMARY STATEMENT
What happened to me was not a mistake or an isolated incident. It was the predictable result of workers’ compensation laws that allow and enable corporations like Hershey to act this way.
This is what they can do. This is what they do.
Hershey chose not to follow its own safety policies. When I was injured, they chose not to file an injury report. Without a report, they avoided providing medical treatment. Instead, my injury was reclassified to shift blame away from the workplace.
I was forced to keep working while my condition worsened — without treatment, without protection, and without accountability.
I paid the price for these choices. And I am not the only one this has been done to.
This is exactly how workers’ compensation laws are being used across America.
Workers get hurt. Companies control the paperwork. Injuries are minimized, reclassified, or ignored. Medical care is delayed or denied. Evidence disappears. Juries are blocked. Corporations walk away shielded by laws that were supposed to protect workers.
What happened to me is happening to countless American workers who don’t have the time, resources, or ability to fight back.
This is not justice. It’s abandonment.
And it raises a simple question for those in power:
Does your promise to drain the swamp include closing the gateway that workers’ compensation laws create — the gateway that allows these injustices to continue unchecked?
Because until that gateway is closed, corporations will keep doing this. And workers will keep paying the price.
PRESIDENT TRUMP’S PROMISE (WORD FOR WORD)
“Every single day I will be fighting for you with every breath in my body. I will not rest until we have delivered the strong, safe, and prosperous America that our children deserve — and that you deserve.”
— President Donald J. Trump
hersheyshurtme.com
This is what they did to me with the help of workers comp laws. I cant be the only 1. This happens, and they are protected.
Put lawmakers to work. Fix the problem. Drain the swamp.