You don't have to double down on proving my point that you are ok with big gov abusing its power against people it/you doesnt like....Antoninus said:Not so much.Tea Party said:No but you sure do sunshine pump the clear abuse of the statute in this instance and ignore the fact that the bank said they did not rely on his numbers.Antoninus said:did I write the statute?Tea Party said:
How very libertarian assuming the people can't make their own judgements if a deal is ok (the bank doing it's own due diligence) and we must rely on government to tell us what is or is not deserved.
I have said… repeatedly… thatthis case was an obvious instance of selective enforcement, and that I would not have filed it had I been in a position to make that decision.
I've also said… repeatedly… that the portion of the judgment related to "excess interest" should not have been included, because he clearly did not obtain preferential rates.I have said no such thing.Quote:
You are saying yay big gov for ignoring the bank and seeking maximum damages per the law against bad orange man even though even though a significant amount of people already do the very same activity and do not get punished.
I think you may be confusing my position in this case, with my position in the Carroll case. In that case, I absolutely support the amount of the punitive damages. Why? Because punitive damages are intended as a tool to smack a bad actor between the eyes with a 2x4, to get their attention and convince them to change their behavior. $2-3 million impunitive damages would not have gotten Trump's attention.
I agreed with you that the legalities of the case is sound.
The reasoning behind the case AND the amount of damages sought AND the selective application of justice are what I am pointing out that any sane person would recognize as clear abuses of government thus making the whole case not sound, in my opinion.
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