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Longstrongsilver

12/10/19 9:19 PM

#94302 RE: Brucebannerr #94301

No In fantasy land EXCEPTIONAL (rare, unusual, not the norm) somehow just means 3 corporations in 2 countries even though they dedicated a whole chapter (chapter 15) to multiple corporations and/or multiple countries .


I’m unsure if you’re unaware, but EXCEPTIONAL is used for POSITIVE outcomes when used CORRECTLY. Granted the definition does inject “USUALLY a good quality” so it’s not like it’s THE LAWS or anything that it can only be used for a positive outcome. HOWEVER, to use the word properly, one must mean it to “an unusual high degree” . Are you saying that a deal in a bankruptcy that happens for peanuts leaving most creditors and all shareholders with zero is somehow “rare, unusual, not the norm” to “AN UNUSUAL HIGH DEGREE”? Don’t most liquidations end badly for shareholders? We know they don’t all do, but certainly we can all agree that most do?

https://www.google.ca/amp/s/www.collinsdictionary.com/amp/english/exceptional

Hmmm so if there’s a whole chapter 15 to deal with the not so rare situation involving 3 corporations in 2 countries and MOST liquidations end badly so this deal for $4.3 (minus half for frees) couldn’t be seen as unusually worse than what happens in most liquidations, what could EXCEPTIONAL mean in this case?


GOOD THINGS COMING OF COURSE