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Steven Lawrence (RRabbit)'s avatar

Thank you everyone who tuned in or watched the recording!

If you prefer to read, the linked article is largely accurate except the ending: we didn't end up getting a dime from the judgment. However, we succeeding in stopping the product in the United States by June 2018 and impalements have drastically declined.

The ending of the legal saga is how I found out we lived in a cage that exists beyond the law. I just didn't understand how it all worked until discovering Ethan's work. It turns out that an even old rabbit can learn new tricks. Thank you Ethan!

https://www.dmagazine.com/publications/d-ceo/2018/march/steven-lawrence-trinity-industries-lawsuit/

Kerry Kohnke's avatar

I love this, but I can’t devote that much time to the videos because in the time that I watch a video I can read several articles. The written word tends to be more concise, whereas the spoken is much more embellished. If times weren’t as critical as they are right now, I would be watching more of these videos. Thank you for this. It is informative. I watched quite a bit of it, but I have to cut it off because I have so many articles already from Substack and from in my email that I need to read. Again, thank you and have a great day.

Kathy Santoro's avatar

Thank you for this it was very informative and shows how greed is king in most corporations. I lived in CT almost 40 years and I’m glad my former Sen Blumenthal didn’t blow you off. He was always consumer affairs driven as AG. Having moved south to help my kids and be with my grandkids it is like a new world for me. I’ve been overwhelmed and appreciate your advice about how to voice concerns.No worries about the echo life isn’t perfect and we need to learn to be more tolerant of each other and life’s happenings that are mere annoyances. There are real horrors happening out here to real people.

William's avatar

Your audio quality is very distracting today. Thank you for your work. I’ll catch the next session.

Anthony's avatar

This was an incredible interview. Thank you both for taking the time to share your knowledge and experience with all of us.

One thing that strikes me is how undeveloped these “executives” are in morality.

When they knew their change to safe a few bucks could cause people to be unnecessarily harmed or killed by their product, they didn’t value human life.

They dehumanized any potential victims, cause they’d be “at fault”, victim blame culture is pervasive.

But the deciding factor? Can we get away with it??

This is the deciding factor in too many corporate and governmental decisions. And a law that doesn’t consider morality, as far as I’m concerned, delicacies itself