I thought you said everybody. Are you not including everybody anymore? Seems selfish.
Will do. Of course we won’t know how it goes until after your debt strike. You planning on starting in the next 6 months or when?
Hahaha. I think that’s impossible.
I wanted to name our kickball team “Whore Island Heroes”. 1 of the girls got pissed because she thought it was disrespecting women. I explained it’s an Archer reference and I was using “whore” to mainly refer to the guys on the team. Then I asked why she immediately connected the word whore to the women on the team.…
I’m not your friend, guy!
Failure or refusal to pay a debt a court has ordered a person to pay is contempt of court. People can be jailed for contempt of the court order, not for the debt itself.
Give us an update when they hit a week please.
Yo-Yo really is a piece of work.
Might not be able to eliminate a debt strike. Better practices can, however, lead to strikers being in contempt of court and landing in jail; having their bank accounts and assets seized; or having their future wages garnished. Have fun with that.
I’m really trying to help you here. New debts will be created with or without the debt strike. But after a debt strike new practices to legally transfer a debtors obligations will be implemented by the collection industry. Anyone with new debt will be stuck paying it or forced into bankruptcy. But you won’t care…
This is why you fail. Ignoring the repercussions of your “debt strike” is short sighted. If it happens, we both know it won’t, the victory will be fleeting, enjoy it.
New debts, legally transferred from credit card companies to debt collectors, would not be canceled. They will be legally collectible. You will have won a battle for those involved in the strike and lost the war for future debtors who aren’t.
This isn’t absolutes. If it is, please provide the cutoff amount. The same cutoff wouldn’t count for the whole population because of cost of living. So limit it to a city or county of your choosing.
Play out the scenario. A well organized and well resourced debt strike is successful. The first few months are great. Collection companies suffer, some/many go out of business. Then, credit card companies, remaining collection companies and new collection companies implement new practices to legally transfer a debtors…
“If someone is neither rich nor poor, what are they?”
Nope. I’m guessing it involves getting a lawyer to prove the collector doesn’t legally own the debt. My uncle is highly successful at this type of law. He’s gone up against collectors for over a decade, never lost. In most cases the person does not have to pay the debt and gets a check from the debt collector. Did…
Hey buddy. If you ain’t 1st, you’re last.
When you refuse to pay the collector gets a court order. Refuse to pay after that and what happens?