lol....even jarod is pwning SF
Its common! It usually only takes me two or three posts to get him to start calling me names and to abandon any attempt at logical argument.
lol....even jarod is pwning SF
Well of course not, lawyers do far more with contracts, divorce and corporate business.The vast majority of lawyers are not TRIAL LAWYERS...
If that really is true, then why are you so worried about any legislation related to capping it? I mean by your own admission it should barely affect you and other trial lawyers...and the vast majority of the TRIAL LAWYERS do not do MEDICAL MALPRACTICE CASES!
Well of course not, lawyers do far more with contracts, divorce and corporate business.
If that really is true, then why are you so worried about any legislation related to capping it? I mean by your own admission it should barely affect you and other trial lawyers...
In reality trial lawyers have spent an unbelievable shitload trying to stop any tort reform related to healthcare, again NUMBER ONE GROUP DONOR to Dems are trial lawyers.
I read fine, I was assuming you would pick up on the obvious link from one to the other. ANY expense in ANY business is going to boost costs to the END USER and inversely with less expenses.Learn to read. First, I didn't say that tort reform would not reduce medical malpractice insurance rates. I said it would not reduce healthcare costs that much. My statement is backed up by the most recent analysis from the CBO.
By the way, what has happened to healthcare costs in Texas since tort reform was adopted? Oh, right. Costs have continued to escalate unabated.
Welcome back.
Capping does help the frivolous cases even now because a trial lawyer would want to be damn sure they have a good case as the return on their cost is not so high that they can gamble on very unlikely to win (which frivolous usually falls under) cases.Im not personally worried, but capping it would not help with the frivilous cases
Well that depends on the size of the cap, to be honest, I find Texas's cap is too low at $250,000 and should increase. The caps purpose should be to stop the ridiculous awards where juries award tens or hundreds of millions., caps would only hurt the most deserving of cases!
Capping does help the frivolous cases even now because a trial lawyer would want to be damn sure they have a good case as the return on their cost is not so high that they can gamble on very unlikely to win (which frivolous usually falls under) cases.
Well that depends on the size of the cap, to be honest, I find Texas's cap is too low at $250,000 and should increase. The caps purpose should be to stop the ridiculous awards where juries award tens or hundreds of millions.
Caps are the dumbist of ideas out there, I am not against all tort reform, but I am against caps.
That's good but it obviously isn't enough as they do still exist and there are juries who will award frivolous cases. With a cap, a lawyer has to be that much more certain that his case is plausible and not frivolous. It's not perfect.Most contengency fee attorneys who take frivilous cases on a regular bases go out of business. I know one with that problem today!
LMAO....
you are simply bitter about being proclaimed a fool in the game.
1) Nigel makes a CLAIM about defense lawyers and corporate lawyers... with nothing to back it up.... so how is that pwning?
2) Nigel doesn't see how it is possible to separate lobbyists who are lawyers from 'lawyers'. Quite frankly... this is just Nigel pwning himself. If someone is a registered lobbyist... then you don't count them... regardless of whether they are a lawyer or not. It is quite simple to exclude them.
3) Do explain how he pwned me here?
I don't like much of any government regulation, but this is not a free market bound by the usual rules with competitive checks and balances. It is the force of a court via a jury or judge that has the power to award amounts far in excess of what a person's damages could be.
I mean take a look at a single excessive case where a jury awards hundreds of millions, how would you GUARANTEE to limit that if not for caps?
You trust every judge to do so? That only helps when the judge is grounded, but not all of them will be though I think most are.At least in Florida, and I know most places.... It is within the judges descretion to reduce an award.
who's respected less
bankers
used car saleman
ambulance chasers
cowardly sofa warriors named topspin
You trust every judge to do so? That only helps when the judge is grounded, but not all of them will be though I think most are.
The problem is that now trial lawyers can often pick their judges (to a degree), especially when they are suing some national company with presence in all or most states; there is some county or area in Illinois where an obscene amount of lawsuits are filed by trial lawyers with far more compared to anywhere else in the nation.
Why? Because in this day and age they have stats on which judges and juries are most likely to award the plaintiff and with the highest damages.
who's respected less
bankers
used car saleman
ambulance chasers
wanna see how cowardly I am ambulace chaser?
i've already seen it, do you have more cowardice to show us?