On Sep 8, 10:55 pm, sh...@xenon.Stanford.EDU (VS) wrote:
> In article <1188798549.132424.45...@22g2000hsm.googlegroups.com>,
>
> wrote:
> >>The context was your ridiculous claim that (quote) ``an e-ticket is not
> >>a written contract,'' followed by a long blovation that any opinion
> >>of yours about e-tickets must be correct because you are a Licensed
> >>Attorney (TM)... even though it was blindingly clear that you knew
> >>bugger-all about e-tickets and how they work. E-tickets were written
> >>contracts back in 2000, and they still are.
>
> >You haven't a clue, have you? Spend some time on google and then see
> >what you have to say, both about "Brooklyn Academy of Law," where I
> >practice law, what position I hold and whether I am a "once-a-year
> >traveler to Las Vegas.
>
> According to Google, you have a degree from a fourth-rate law school
> (Brooklyn^H^H^H^HLoyola Academy of Law or something - doesn't seem
> to appear among the top fifty US law schools, per US News rankings)
Loyola Law is fourth rate? Try again, sonny.
> and hold a position as ``counsel'' (isn't that a shorthand for failed
> lawyers who didn't make partner?) at a third-rate firm.
My firm is third-rate? "Counsel" is short-hand for "didn't make
partner?"
Try again, sonny.
> Apparently,
> law is not the first career at which you failed, which would explain
> why you imagine that a law degree is a license to spout nonsense
> about e-tickets.
Yeah, right. I used to wonder why you drew constant attacks from so
many people on the net. Guess I know, don't I?
>
> >E-tickets are not written contracts if there is no writing, and there
> >is no writing when they are booked by phone. You do know the
> >definition of "writing," don't you?
>
> I do know that no so long ago you claimed that (quote) ``an e-ticket
> is an oral promise.'' Apparently, all these annual joints to Vegas
> still haven't taught you that e-tickets come in forms other than oral
> promises by airline representatives. Tsk, tsk.
I think you mean, "jaunt," not "joint." And I have no idea what
you're talking about. I don't take "annual jaunts" to Las Vegas, and
when I do go I don't fly.
>
> >By the way, where is your law degree from? Where are you authorized
> >to practice law?
>
> I don't need a law degree to steer you -
Sure, you're clearly a well-qualified legal expert.
> ever gently and kindly -
> towards realizing that your claims about e-tickets (``an e-ticket
> is an oral promise'' and ``an e-ticket is not a written contract'')
> are pure nonsense. But if you don't believe me, why don't you stomp
> your little feet at IATA and tell *them* what you think about legality
> of e-tickets.
As I said (though I understand you have trouble with content as well
as context), in 2000, when I made those comments, etickets were mad
eon the phone and no written confirmations were provided. However,
don't let the facts get in your way.
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