Is Disney arguing this should go to binding arbitration and that they are not at fault for the death, or are they arguing that it is legal for them to kill people whose families had Disney+ trials?
It’s fine to have your own strong opinion on this case, but you can’t have your own facts.
Is it likely that there will be legal consequences for Disney if it went to arbitration? I’m guessing if they’re pushing for arbitration, they probably know it means they’ll get away with it - so granting arbitration is essentially the same as legally sanctioning their actions or negligence.
Law. Arbitration. Judges. Contracts.
You’re not in the land of facts. You’re in the realm of paper reality, an artificial universe made up entirely by humans. The only facts you have here are what the ink on the paper says and a historical record of specific actions taken out of context.
What is the fundamental different between a Disney operation causing the death of someone through negligence and going to prove arbitration run by corporate partners and a Disney operation murdering someone and not being held to account by the law we created to punish murderers?
Not even the doctor. Their claim is the widower had a subscription. And it was not really a subscription either. Just a month-long free trial.
Disney claims Piccolo reportedly agreed to this in 2019 when signing up for a one-month free trial of the streaming service on his PlayStation console.
Holy shit, the absolute depravity of it
Lawyers have no morals. It’s a fucking game to them. Who can be the most clever, ha, look at this clause, we’ve got them now! Never stopping to reflect on what they’re actually doing.
Mandatory reeducation for lawyers after the revolution. Except public defenders y’all are cool
Make the lawyers from 5-4 Podcast head it up. They do a pretty good job analyzing Supreme Court decisions (especially the bad ones, which tends to be their bread and butter).
“You activated my trap clause.”
it’s a magical place, if you have in mind that dark magic is magic too