… God doesn’t think he’s a Lawyer! HA… HA HA HA HA HA HA HA… ha… ha… hee…
(No, i don’t have anything to contribute to this thread. Yeah, this post is totally useless. Shut it. I’m low on sleep and I have something against lawyers right now. So nyah.)
No, I’m saying that you’ve pointed out no legitimate differences between advertising and legal solicitation. And asking whether, since you were worked up enough to pit the one, you held the same contempt for the other.
Yes, although I begrudgingly concede that advertisers pay for much of what I do on the internet, for the TV shows I watch, and for the magazines I read. Not having ever lived in a society that is not advertiser-supported, I wonder what one would look like. I’m guessing there would be sweet smelling flowers in front of every building, shit would smell like roses, there would be no crime or violence, and we’d all close each day with a group hug.
I’ll concede to you that the core of my rant is the practice of trolling the accident databases, and I did not mention it in #1. These clowns did it in NC for me, and others in VA for my wife’s accident in May.
So it seems, VunderBob, you would prefer less targeted advertising (TV spots, Yellow Pages ads, general mass mailers) than more targeted solicitation (single mailers to people who have been involved in an accident). Seems somewhat of an odd position to take.
Or in my case, know they were legally wronged but can’t get a PI attorney to take the case because there isn’t someone to sue with deep enough pockets.
I get where you’re coming from and understand why it would strike you as distasteful, but the lawyer who sent the letter probably doesn’t waste valuable billing time evaluating claims before sticking a stamp on an envelope. They directed an ad towards you because you’re in the target demographic for their service. You were in an accident. People who are in accidents often need legal representation, so they sent you a letter, just like they do everyone else. It’s no different from television ads for dishwashing soap on daytime TV, and beer ads during football game at night. The people who put the ads on don’t know that you don’t have a dishwasher and don’t drink.