typical reddit/r/legaladvice post: "person X put their car / house / student loans / business in person Y's name, just as - you know - a <gestures> paperwork thing - but now creditors / the federal government / the DMV / the police / the IRS are acting as if this is Y's thing"
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8/ I fired an employee once for throwing a stapler across the room in anger. He then tried to get unemployment benefits. I fought. I showed his signature on the employee handbook, including the "workplace violence" clause.
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9/ His rebuttal was "well Travis said that that was just boilerplate". I responded to the mediator "that's absolutely correct; it's a large document that I reuse. That's what 'boilerplate' means." But what did Andy THINK it meant? "Sign this ... you know, for lulz" ?
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10/ This is a mystery. Perhaps some day I'll understand.
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11/ necro-posting to this thread because this is so relevanthttps://twitter.com/k_d_payne/status/1118985719157088256 …
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12/ "that's just as - you know - <gestures> a paperwork thing"
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End of conversation
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