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« on: December 20, 2017, 08:44:10 AM »
years and many years ago i had the fortunate sponsorship of a good lawyer. i took him one of those waivers to read. he gave it a quick glance and said these things aren't worth the paper they are written on. the reason i was given was, for any form to be even considered legal and binding it must be signed and notarized. without that how would one know that anyone hadn't just wrote down anyones name?
as always it will come down to who has the best lawyer, you get what you pay for. how much justice can you afford? the written waiver is just getting them one up on you before you start with them.
sometimes getting in the first word is just as important as getting in the last word.
and we here all know how important that is now don't we?
this ain't racin discussion, its liability discussion. probably should be locked up and moved before the discrimination claims start?