You almost have to admire the efficiency.
While the rest of the country is busy struggling to afford groceries, gasoline, and health insurance, Los Angeles County has apparently discovered the secret to infinite healthcare money. Not cures. Not patients. Just billing.
Here’s the headline that should stop every taxpayer cold:
Eighteen percent of the entire nation’s home health care billing comes out of Los Angeles County. Not California. Not the West Coast. One county.
Sure. Totally normal. Nothing to see here.
And it gets better.
One single doctor—clearly the most productive medical professional in human history—billed the federal government $120 million in a single year, claiming to personally oversee 1,900 patients. That’s not a doctor. That’s a Marvel superhero. Somewhere between Iron Man and Dr. Strange, apparently.
Let’s do the math Washington refuses to do.
That’s five new patients every single day, without weekends, holidays, sleep, or time to actually examine anyone. But don’t worry—the paperwork was flawless. And in modern government, paperwork is reality.
Now let’s talk hospice agencies, because this is where the story becomes performance art.
Los Angeles County boasts nearly 2,000 hospice agencies. That’s not a typo.
That’s more than 36 states combined.
That’s 30 times more than Florida and New York—together.
Apparently, the Golden State has achieved a level of mortality density previously unknown to science.
But wait—there’s a map.
Investigators found 287 hospice providers clustered within a two-mile radius. Not hospitals. Not medical campuses. Strip malls. Unmarked buildings. A wrecking yard. A vacant lot.
Yes, a vacant lot.
Because when you think “end-of-life care,” nothing says compassion like a patch of dirt behind a chain-link fence.
And here’s the best part—straight from the mouths of people who know how the scam works:
“It’s all just paperwork. I could fill that out in Kazakhstan and get a hospice license waiting for me.”
That’s not satire. That’s the system.
California didn’t just create a regulatory loophole—it built an entire parallel healthcare economy, where money flows faster than patients, oversight is optional, and fraud is treated like a rounding error.
And yet, we’re told—daily—that the real crisis is underfunding.
The truth is uglier and far more insulting. The money is there. The controls aren’t. And everyone in power knows it.
This isn’t accidental. This isn’t obscure. This isn’t complicated.
This is what happens when ideology replaces enforcement, when bureaucrats confuse compassion with negligence, and when a government so terrified of being called “insensitive” decides it’s easier to rubber-stamp fraud than ask questions.
So yes—the fraud being exposed in California is insane.
But what’s truly insane is pretending it couldn’t happen anywhere else…
…or that the same people who allowed it to explode will somehow be the ones to clean it up.
Until then, keep an eye on those vacant lots. Apparently, they’re very profitable

Yet another great article. 2026 is the year the blogger woke up. Keep them coming please. Lack of comments means you are on the right track-no sarcasm.
Interesting (to use Mr Newsom’s favorite word) that Newsom’s X accounts were just bragging last week how many hospices he closed down in the last five years or so. He also has been posting credible reports of fraud in Red States! Imagine him mobilizing leftists to go after fraud (instead of ICE) in red states! That is glorious!
Yes, fraud is everywhere. Confront it head-on like you would donning the full armor against Satan. No fear. Fraud and corruption are at your school board level, County Supervisor level; with City Councils being the worst offenders. Auburn anyone? Frame here? Popp? Davis?
Maybe blogger just found out about medical fraud in California, but it is not new. Why the blog entry now about it? Newsom’s been on it for years. The numbers have always been there for people to write about. Why now? Distracting from something else? Usually.
The Trump administration has made it fashionable (emboldening patriots) to expose fraud in California. Or maybe blogger had NO IDEA the fraud existed or where it was? It is EVERYWHERE.
It’s even in the comment sections of blogs.