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#11
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Great. Another opportunity to make a group of ethicless lawyers into
instant millionaires. At the expense of all the rest of us who take air transportation. |
#12
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Give her 50cents and tell her to quit sniveling
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#13
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On 8 Aug 2005 13:36:26 -0700, "Mister Wrong"
wrote: Great. Another opportunity to make a group of ethicless lawyers into instant millionaires. At the expense of all the rest of us who take air transportation. According to the lawyers, they are doing it for the good of the masses. Somehow these lawyers seem to make a bundle. |
#14
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Great. Another opportunity to make a group of ethicless
lawyers into instant millionaires. At the expense of all the rest of us who take air transportation. According to the lawyers, they are doing it for the good of the masses. Somehow these lawyers seem to make a bundle. I would be interested in hearing that the filing of a 75 million dollar lawsuit is somehow good for the masses. Investigate how liability claims cost all of us, and how because of these legal actions we pay more for everything. I personally cannot see how turning lawyers into millionaires is somehow a benefit to society. |
#15
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In message . com "Nolo
Contendre" wrote: Great. Another opportunity to make a group of ethicless lawyers into instant millionaires. At the expense of all the rest of us who take air transportation. According to the lawyers, they are doing it for the good of the masses. Somehow these lawyers seem to make a bundle. I would be interested in hearing that the filing of a 75 million dollar lawsuit is somehow good for the masses. Investigate how liability claims cost all of us, and how because of these legal actions we pay more for everything. I personally cannot see how turning lawyers into millionaires is somehow a benefit to society. Actually, the benefit is because without the constant threat of a class action lawsuit, a company has no incentive to behave. If a company knows that they can pay off each of the living victims $10,000 and each of the dead ones $100,000 (into their estates, obviously), then even with 55 passengers on board, that's only $550,000 payout (maximum), so any safety mechanism that prevents a once in 10 year crash but costs more then $550,000 isn't worth it. On the other hand, if the company knows that they'll pay out $50,000,000 for screwing up, it's worth their time to make damn sure they don't put themselves in a position to pay out that kind of cash. That being said, the liars^H^H^H^Hawyers get WAY too much of the settlement, and the actual victims not only get too little, but they often get things they don't want. For example, I was recently part of a class that "won" a judgment against a company that lied about the sound output capabilities of their product. I believe, although I'm not certain, that I may have actually been affected by this (although it would definitely have been a purchasing decision since it impacted my intended use, although I never did get around to finishing that product) So what do I get? What's their punishment? They're giving me a discount off of a replacement product. So in order to be compensated for the fact that they sold me a product that did not live up to their marketing department's claims, they want me to buy something else? I feel that it's appropriate that I should be forced to offer a refund OR a completely free replacement product (with or without the original being returned, their choice, and at their expense), anything less and I still feel shafted. As it is, I'm no longer using the product anyway, I've already purchased a replacement, so I'll probably use the discount against something I don't need, but something I can sell -- Next on FOX, all new REALITY SHOW promises to be a hit: "STOP A BULLET WITH YOUR HEAD" |
#16
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Wonder how many people will file for a piece of the $75 million who was
not even on the airplane or even in Canada. |
#17
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On Tue, 09 Aug 2005 12:22:27 -0600, DevilsPGD
wrote: For example, I was recently part of a class that "won" a judgment against a company that lied about the sound output capabilities of their product. I believe, although I'm not certain, that I may have actually been affected by this (although it would definitely have been a purchasing decision since it impacted my intended use, although I never did get around to finishing that product) So what do I get? What's their punishment? They're giving me a discount off of a replacement product. So in order to be compensated for the fact that they sold me a product that did not live up to their marketing department's claims, they want me to buy something else? I feel that it's appropriate that I should be forced to offer a refund OR a completely free replacement product (with or without the original being returned, their choice, and at their expense), anything less and I still feel shafted. But that might have cut into the fees the company would agree to pay the lawyers. |
#18
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#19
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In message Brian
wrote: But that might have cut into the fees the company would agree to pay the lawyers. Alas, true enough. -- "Gee, Bill what do you want to do tonight?" "The same thing we do every night Steve. Try to take over the world!" |
#20
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In message Brian
wrote: I remember a case here where more than 100 people claimed to be on a bus that was involved in an accident. Might be harder to pull off with a plane though although there may well suits filed claiming psychological trauma from witnessing the accident while driving by on that expressway. Or people that saw it on the news. Hell, I'm pretty sure I've been scarred just by reading this thread about the crash -- If they'd never crashed then I'd be doing something product right now like working. -- "Gee, Bill what do you want to do tonight?" "The same thing we do every night Steve. Try to take over the world!" |
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