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Whirlpool used to sell propane refrigerators in Europe, but didnât dare do it in the US, because they had a tendency to explode. The cost in law suits was acceptable in Europe, but in the US, with their fancy pants lawyers, made the lives of Americans worth too much to be acceptable lossesâŠTake pride, folks, your life is worth more than a FrenchmanâsâŠ.
Ah, Standard Right Wing Talking Point #7⊠I was wondering when it would show up..If you look closely at your ladder, youâll find the warning is not on the top rung; itâs on the second rung down, and it says âdonât stand above this stepâyou could lose your balance.â Which is true. A stepladder is a precarious perch, and when youâre working up that high you canât steady yourself with your hands; youâve got to sort of press your knee against the top rung. So there is a common-sense reason for the warning. And if the lawyers/government/etc were really that serious about keeping you from doing this, theyâd remove the top rung or tilt it so you couldnât stand on it. The label is a piece of information, thatâs all⊠and youâre free to ignore it..As for the legendary âhot coffeeâ story, look it up on Snopes. The coffee in question was almost at the boiling point, well above the restaurant industryâs standards for coffee temperature (because the restaurant in question was using scalding water to extract a wee bit of flavor from the cheap beans they were using), and the customer suffered extensive burns. The company was negligent and deserved to pay⊠and interestingly, the large suit only came after they refused to pay the customerâs medical bills, which were pretty small compared to the eventual award. They could have avoided the whole business by accepting a little responsibility for their actions.
I once saw a tool drill that said âDo not use for dental procedures.â Who is doing that?!? âCome on son, we donât need to spend money on a dentist, just step into my toolshed!!!â
Aah, the American legal system. Makes you proud, doesnât it?
October 1998: Terrence Dickson of Bristol, Pa., was leaving a house he had just finished robbing by way of the garage. He was not able to get the garage door to go up, because the automatic door opener was malfunctioning. He couldnât re-enter the house because the door connecting the house and garage locked when he pulled it shut. The family was on vacation. Mr. Dickson found himself locked in the garage for eight days. He subsisted on a case of Pepsi he found in the garage and a large bag of dry dog food. Mr. Dickson sued the homeownerâs insurance, claiming the situation caused him undue mental anguish. The jury agreed to the tune of a half million dollars.
Reminds me of classic Bloom County strip. Steve Dallas, young lawyer, sits in his cob-webbed office with no business. âWhat this county needs is ANOTHER lawyer.â
@DaboogadieWe wouldnât want to penalise success, would we?You have no idea the stress endured by those who tirelessly struggle to attain the status of richest resident in the boneyard.
@hsawlrae@LinuxOsLove these suggestions.Ah, to mass-produce donut holes and dehydrated water. âTwould be the crowning achievements of American ingenuity and make the U.S. the envy of the world.Now all we need is someone with deep enough pockets to begin production and watch the money roll in.
In previous generations, it was pretty much understood that gross stupidity was usually punished with death. Unfortunately, we have now evolved into a society where the litigation lawyers have made their clientsâ idiocy a reason to sue.
Two results: the shallow end of the gene pool is not properly dredged, letting the stupid propagate, and laughable law suits abound..
I know itâs easy to make snide remarks about lawyers but nowadays it is lawyers who impose some degree of responsibility on business not to kill and maim people in the pursuit of cheap overseas goods and food in the name of profit. Remember Mitsui who paid off families of the injured for some time and hid the facts and fees â twice rather than do a recall and fix the known problem. Want the job? Set up a muckraking website. Do something besides mouth the lines the insurance companies feed you.
A corporationâs only responsibility is to its shareholders. If itâs cheaper to pay off lawsuits because of accidents or deaths of the consumers than it is to fix the problem, well, let the bodies pile up like cord wood as long as the profits keep rolling inâŠ
Got 6 phosphor mines that are polluting waterways with selenium levels far above the EPA mandated limit, are toxic to wildlife, and are causing mutations in fish? What does a responsible company do? Well, Simplotâs solution is to get the EPA to raise the regulated limit on Selenium. Problem solved!
If corporations are people, they should be thrown in jail to protect the public from these sociopathsâŠ
hsawlrae over 12 years ago
Donut holes.
Linux0s over 12 years ago
Dehydrated water.
pbarnrob over 12 years ago
Naaahhhh; Paperwork for competitors to wade through!Maybe they could sub-contract âlegal talentâ to other shops, as workload permits.
Kali39 over 12 years ago
So thatâs what happens behind the scenes at Dilbertâs companyâŠ
Varnes over 12 years ago
Whirlpool used to sell propane refrigerators in Europe, but didnât dare do it in the US, because they had a tendency to explode. The cost in law suits was acceptable in Europe, but in the US, with their fancy pants lawyers, made the lives of Americans worth too much to be acceptable lossesâŠTake pride, folks, your life is worth more than a FrenchmanâsâŠ.
revisages over 12 years ago
what? no manufact?âweâre ready for the negligence [we shall show toward our own] lawsuitsâ
Aussie Down Under over 12 years ago
How uselessâŠa room full of lawyers.
jreckard over 12 years ago
That must be the bar room.
wicky over 12 years ago
I hope he dropped Victoria, she was a pushy broad.
puddleglum1066 over 12 years ago
Ah, Standard Right Wing Talking Point #7⊠I was wondering when it would show up..If you look closely at your ladder, youâll find the warning is not on the top rung; itâs on the second rung down, and it says âdonât stand above this stepâyou could lose your balance.â Which is true. A stepladder is a precarious perch, and when youâre working up that high you canât steady yourself with your hands; youâve got to sort of press your knee against the top rung. So there is a common-sense reason for the warning. And if the lawyers/government/etc were really that serious about keeping you from doing this, theyâd remove the top rung or tilt it so you couldnât stand on it. The label is a piece of information, thatâs all⊠and youâre free to ignore it..As for the legendary âhot coffeeâ story, look it up on Snopes. The coffee in question was almost at the boiling point, well above the restaurant industryâs standards for coffee temperature (because the restaurant in question was using scalding water to extract a wee bit of flavor from the cheap beans they were using), and the customer suffered extensive burns. The company was negligent and deserved to pay⊠and interestingly, the large suit only came after they refused to pay the customerâs medical bills, which were pretty small compared to the eventual award. They could have avoided the whole business by accepting a little responsibility for their actions.
38lowell over 12 years ago
Plus think of the other suing possibilities.
hcr1985 over 12 years ago
I once saw a tool drill that said âDo not use for dental procedures.â Who is doing that?!? âCome on son, we donât need to spend money on a dentist, just step into my toolshed!!!â
dabugger over 12 years ago
now WAITâŠ.this is no comic stripâŠ.that is the REAL thingâŠ.!!âŠsomebody tell Jon StewartâŠ..
Sandfan over 12 years ago
Aah, the American legal system. Makes you proud, doesnât it?
October 1998: Terrence Dickson of Bristol, Pa., was leaving a house he had just finished robbing by way of the garage. He was not able to get the garage door to go up, because the automatic door opener was malfunctioning. He couldnât re-enter the house because the door connecting the house and garage locked when he pulled it shut. The family was on vacation. Mr. Dickson found himself locked in the garage for eight days. He subsisted on a case of Pepsi he found in the garage and a large bag of dry dog food. Mr. Dickson sued the homeownerâs insurance, claiming the situation caused him undue mental anguish. The jury agreed to the tune of a half million dollars.
QuiteDragon over 12 years ago
I hear that âhot coffeeâ canard constantly. Here is a factual account of the incident:
http://www.hotcoffeethemovie.com/Default.asp
Ernest Lemmingway over 12 years ago
âAccountabilityâŠis un-American!â â Opus
mistercatworks over 12 years ago
Reminds me of classic Bloom County strip. Steve Dallas, young lawyer, sits in his cob-webbed office with no business. âWhat this county needs is ANOTHER lawyer.â
Vonne Anton over 12 years ago
âAnd because youâre the new guy, you can start by taking their coffee ordersâŠgood luck!â
stripseeker over 12 years ago
@DaboogadieWe wouldnât want to penalise success, would we?You have no idea the stress endured by those who tirelessly struggle to attain the status of richest resident in the boneyard.
renewed1 over 12 years ago
Moocherâs mindset: How much money can I extort from this producer?
Linguist over 12 years ago
" When men drink, then they are rich and successful and win lawsuits and are happyâŠ.."Aristophanes c. 450-385 b.c.
Linguist over 12 years ago
" Every peasant has a lawyer inside of him, just as every lawyer, no matter how urbane he may be, carries a peasant within himself."Miguel de Unamuno
stripseeker over 12 years ago
@hsawlrae@LinuxOsLove these suggestions.Ah, to mass-produce donut holes and dehydrated water. âTwould be the crowning achievements of American ingenuity and make the U.S. the envy of the world.Now all we need is someone with deep enough pockets to begin production and watch the money roll in.
Aussie Down Under over 12 years ago
So true. I opened a package that said âdonât put the plastic bag over your head as this is dangerousâ. Itâs not rocket science.
brewwitch over 12 years ago
In previous generations, it was pretty much understood that gross stupidity was usually punished with death. Unfortunately, we have now evolved into a society where the litigation lawyers have made their clientsâ idiocy a reason to sue.
Two results: the shallow end of the gene pool is not properly dredged, letting the stupid propagate, and laughable law suits abound..
Spyderred over 12 years ago
I know itâs easy to make snide remarks about lawyers but nowadays it is lawyers who impose some degree of responsibility on business not to kill and maim people in the pursuit of cheap overseas goods and food in the name of profit. Remember Mitsui who paid off families of the injured for some time and hid the facts and fees â twice rather than do a recall and fix the known problem. Want the job? Set up a muckraking website. Do something besides mouth the lines the insurance companies feed you.
Spamgaard over 12 years ago
A corporationâs only responsibility is to its shareholders. If itâs cheaper to pay off lawsuits because of accidents or deaths of the consumers than it is to fix the problem, well, let the bodies pile up like cord wood as long as the profits keep rolling inâŠ
Got 6 phosphor mines that are polluting waterways with selenium levels far above the EPA mandated limit, are toxic to wildlife, and are causing mutations in fish? What does a responsible company do? Well, Simplotâs solution is to get the EPA to raise the regulated limit on Selenium. Problem solved!
If corporations are people, they should be thrown in jail to protect the public from these sociopathsâŠ
pcolli over 12 years ago
No different in the UK.
emjaycee over 12 years ago
âCape does not allow user to fly.â
David_J Premium Member over 12 years ago
âI forget what we manufactureâŠâ
Thatâs because you donât. Itâs all made in China now.
el8 over 12 years ago
have lawyer-suit, will travail â palidin