In the same vein, starting a biz could be the comeback of someone's credit as well. As it may be hard to believe, good credit is hard to come by in most situations. Too many folks are lacking knowledge for many diverse reasons (another topic for another list though).
So, 1 point for Farrar, although you did take it a bit far with the trash comment...lol. For the record, my credit isn't shot so I'm not defending bad credit because I have it...I just had it in my former life (like a few years back...lol). My credit is mid-level and rising, now that I have more knowledge.
On 11/7/05, Adrocknaphobia <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
On 11/7/05, John Farrar <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> So... if someone is poor or made a bad decision you think they are basically
> trash?
If someone can not manage their personal finances, then they should
not start a business. Understandably, your only argument to this point
is to take the response out of context. In no way does poor credit
mean a person is trash.
>And putting people out of work is not a
> good thing! Do me a favor. Rent "Braveheart" and watch it. When you get
> done... figure out why the word "heart" is part of the legends name.
Rather than drawing your business knowledge from Braveheart, I
recommend you study economics and capitalism. I have my reservations
that William Wallace could run a successful IT firm.
Your arguments are so obfuscated that it's hard to follow any
semblance of logic. Exactly what is your point? That ColdFusion
Enterprise should be free? (I'll take my answer without the 7 degrees
of Mel Gibson, thank you.)
-Adam
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