k9quaint
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August 25, 2013, 06:27:04 PM |
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Oh so you are saying that an officer of the company saying a product will be delivered in two weeks for months on end is... not intentionally misleading his customers? That is what he is saying. Plus, he is saying everyone will make their money back. Shiller gotta shill I guess.
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PuertoLibre
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August 25, 2013, 06:28:06 PM |
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Oh so you are saying that an officer of the company saying a product will be delivered in two weeks for months on end is... not intentionally misleading his customers? That is what he is saying. Plus, he is saying everyone will make their money back. Shiller gotta shill I guess. I am shill in my own league. I am not with these amateurs.
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bcp19
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August 25, 2013, 06:29:47 PM |
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Oh so you are saying that an officer of the company saying a product will be delivered in two weeks for months on end is... not intentionally misleading his customers?
If his supplier is telling him 2 weeks and he turns around and tells customers 2 weeks, yes. Do you have proof something else happened?
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I do not suffer fools gladly... "Captain! We're surrounded!" I embrace my inner Kool-Aid.
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Viceroy
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August 25, 2013, 06:31:04 PM |
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from the article: The second part is about the liar's intention. A lie that you don't mean anyone to take seriously, such as a joke or hyperbole, wouldn't constitute fraud.
When it comes to proving intent for fraud, courts often look at what the liar could gain if someone believes the lie. If the liar benefits from someone believing and acting on the lie, that tends to show intent. Clearly the courts will be looking at the benefit to BFL caused by Josh's continued lie of "two weeks". I don't need to prove anything but I'm sure the prosecutor who takes the case will find plenty of people who will state "Josh lied for the benefit of BFL".
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bcp19
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August 25, 2013, 06:34:31 PM |
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from the article: The second part is about the liar's intention. A lie that you don't mean anyone to take seriously, such as a joke or hyperbole, wouldn't constitute fraud.
When it comes to proving intent for fraud, courts often look at what the liar could gain if someone believes the lie. If the liar benefits from someone believing and acting on the lie, that tends to show intent. Clearly the courts will be looking at the benefit to BFL caused by Josh's continued lie of "two weeks". I don't need to prove anything but I'm sure the prosecutor who takes the case will find plenty of people who will state "Josh lied for the benefit of BFL". So you have no proof.
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I do not suffer fools gladly... "Captain! We're surrounded!" I embrace my inner Kool-Aid.
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Viceroy
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August 25, 2013, 06:36:25 PM |
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Read it again. The courts will look at the beneficiary of the lie. I do not need to prove it, it is patently clear that BFL benefits by it's officers public lie. This is a cut and dried case of fraud.
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bcp19
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August 25, 2013, 06:39:26 PM |
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Read it again. The courts will look at the beneficiary of the lie. I do not need to prove it, it is patently clear that BFL benefits by it's officers public lie. This is a cut and dried case of fraud.
I see, how much are you paying your lawyer?
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I do not suffer fools gladly... "Captain! We're surrounded!" I embrace my inner Kool-Aid.
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Viceroy
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August 25, 2013, 06:40:17 PM |
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Hey bcp I have a riddle for you....
What do you call it when a company starts shipping alot of product?
I'm looking for a term that describes "in a mass; as a group"
Can you tell me that two word phrase? I'm betting you cannot because you never made it into MIT. So let's see.... what phrase am I looking for?
(Please, nobody help him).....
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k9quaint
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August 25, 2013, 06:40:49 PM |
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Oh so you are saying that an officer of the company saying a product will be delivered in two weeks for months on end is... not intentionally misleading his customers?
If his supplier is telling him 2 weeks and he turns around and tells customers 2 weeks, yes. Do you have proof something else happened? There are many instances of BFL contradicting itself. If you didn't just get off the shortbus, you might have read about them. Name: bcp19 Posts: 418 Activity: 56 Position: Member Date Registered: July 05, 2013, 03:28:38 PM That is why everyone makes fun of you.
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PuertoLibre
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August 25, 2013, 06:43:59 PM |
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Hey bcp I have a riddle for you....
What do you call it when a company starts shipping alot of product?
I'm looking for a term that describes "in a mass; as a group"
Can you tell me that two word phrase? I'm betting you cannot because you never made it into MIT. So let's see.... what phrase am I looking for?
(Please, nobody help him).....
SNAFU-FUBAR? http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Military_slang
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Viceroy
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August 25, 2013, 06:44:32 PM |
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Yea, he's in a snafu now... he'll never get it. He is FUBAR! (I don't believe he could get into MIT).
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bcp19
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August 25, 2013, 06:44:56 PM |
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Hey bcp I have a riddle for you....
What do you call it when a company starts shipping alot of product?
I'm looking for a term that describes "in a mass; as a group"
Can you tell me that two word phrase? I'm betting you cannot because you never made it into MIT. So let's see.... what phrase am I looking for?
(Please, nobody help him).....
I fail to see your point, I was working in Computer Science not corporate shipping. I can't play a piano either.
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I do not suffer fools gladly... "Captain! We're surrounded!" I embrace my inner Kool-Aid.
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Viceroy
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August 25, 2013, 06:45:33 PM |
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Oh come on, is that the best you got mr 148 IQ?
Answer my question. Anyone who qualified for MIT should be able to figure out this two word phrase. It has French origins.
I'm looking for a term that describes "in a mass; as a group"
(no help from the audience please).
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bcp19
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August 25, 2013, 06:48:53 PM |
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Oh come on, is that the best you got mr 148 IQ?
Intelligence has nothing to do with knowledge. I know nothing about fashion, I don't know how to rebuild a car engine, I don't know how to refine crude oil into gasoline, I don't know how to fly a helicopter. BUT, I could learn if I wanted to.
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I do not suffer fools gladly... "Captain! We're surrounded!" I embrace my inner Kool-Aid.
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Bicknellski
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August 25, 2013, 06:50:37 PM |
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customer satisfaction.
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mah87 (OP)
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-Bitcoin & Ripple-
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August 25, 2013, 06:51:11 PM |
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Oh come on, is that the best you got mr 148 IQ?
Intelligence has nothing to do with knowledge. I know nothing about fashion, I don't know how to rebuild a car engine, I don't know how to refine crude oil into gasoline, I don't know how to fly a helicopter. BUT, I could learn if I wanted to. What a deep thought, "people can learn". Thank you IQ God.
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bcp19
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August 25, 2013, 06:53:11 PM |
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lol. Just a second ago you told me there is a difference between the words fraud and lie. Now you can't give me a simple two word term that is French in origin and means to ship "in a mass; as a group", is that correct?
I am not french, your definition sparks nothing in my memory. How can I know shomething if I cannot remember having heard it? Does IQ = Omnipotence?
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I do not suffer fools gladly... "Captain! We're surrounded!" I embrace my inner Kool-Aid.
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PuertoLibre
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Activity: 1890
Merit: 1003
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August 25, 2013, 06:53:54 PM |
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Oh come on, is that the best you got mr 148 IQ?
Answer my question. Anyone who qualified for MIT should be able to figure out this two word phrase. It has French origins.
I'm looking for a term that describes "in a mass; as a group"
(no help from the audience please).
OH, I just realized the answer.
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Bicknellski
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August 25, 2013, 06:54:07 PM |
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Oh come on, is that the best you got mr 148 IQ?
Intelligence has nothing to do with knowledge. I know nothing about fashion, I don't know how to rebuild a car engine, I don't know how to refine crude oil into gasoline, I don't know how to fly a helicopter. BUT, I could learn if I wanted to. What a deep thought, "people can learn". Thank you IQ God. As a teacher I can definitely confirm people can learn. Unfortunately for bcp19 that very basic human capacity has eluded him here in this thread and many more.
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bcp19
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August 25, 2013, 06:54:51 PM |
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lol. Just a second ago you told me there is a difference between the words fraud and lie. Now you can't give me a simple two word term that is French in origin and means to ship "in a mass; as a group", is that correct?
Can you tell me how to tune a hetrodyne receiver? Can you tell me why a inductive capacatance circuit is bad? Do you know what hysteresis loss is?
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I do not suffer fools gladly... "Captain! We're surrounded!" I embrace my inner Kool-Aid.
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