The lawyers here are not complaining about being “hounded” for advice. All we are saying is that the OP is wrong about her parsing of the terms “legal advice” and “information.”
Actually, this thread was about being hounded for free advice. The one about Stoid wanting information and the attorneys calling it advice is the other thread. Of course, it’s all gotten a bit jumbled since…
i want my motherfucking ice done the right way!!!
Yeah, in a tumbler! Not JUMBLED!!!
Explain to me how this is different from any other service-expertise profession? See also, Doctor, Dentist, Veterinarian.
Guess what, if you’re in a car accident with a severe leg injury, and they do a bunch of surgery to try and save your leg, but it fails and they end up amputating, you have to pay those assholes even though you lost your leg!
And if they operate on a loved one, and the loved one dies, they send out a buttload of bills anyway! The nerve of these people.
And the bills wouldn’t even be so bad if they didn’t insist on stuffing them up your butt.
LMAO!
Ahem. Excuse me, you may all continue in your regularly scheduled, informative thread about lawyers arguing over how to make ice cubes.
The failures in many high end specialties are usually outside of their control. Your leg may look salvagable but ends up not being so.
In my trade what stoid is trying to do is walk into “godlike computer shop” and get an estimate on a perfectly assembled $5,000 system using the most perfectly matched parts, then ordering the parts from online for $4500 and calling the shop half a dozen times “seeking information” when she has problems putting it together.
when people try this on me, I want to tell them to make sure the CPU is firmly seated by hitting it several times with a large hammer.
“And then you should pour a glass of distilled water on the motherboard. It’s important to use distilled water, because tap water contains minerals and stuff. Of course I’m sure, it’s a water cooled system. Amateurs!”