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Well, again, there is no judgment, and there is no degree of finality. The entire point of the CT statute I quoted is to prevent excessive jury verdicts from going into effect, so isn't the system designed to obtain exactly the outcome for which you are advocating?
That's not what I'm reading from the statute, and in any case I'm not seeing it in action yet. And even if the final result turns out to be more reasonable, there's still the old problem of "You can beat the rap, but you can't beat the ride." Nothing in this case indicates a system or society that is "designed to obtain exactly the outcome for which [I am] advocating", which is a general tolerance for a wide range of opinions.
?? You were advocating for a lower verdict, not for none at all. And this entire thread has been about the amount of the verdict.
Anyhow, you think are not seeing it action yet because you aren't familiar with how these things work; judges reduce excessive verdicts every day of the week. But not until a motion is made, argued and heard. It's not going to happen overnight.
No? I can prefer a lower verdict to a higher verdict, and none at all to a lower verdict.
That's great. Considering how ridiculous the jury's verdict is, the judge has a long way to go here.
Yes, of course you can, but the point is, you weren't. So when you said, "Nothing in this case indicates a system or society that is "designed to obtain exactly the outcome for which [I am] advocating", which is a general tolerance for a wide range of opinions," that made no sense.
I don't see how it makes "no sense" that the order of outcomes which best achieves a general tolerance for a wide range of opinions here is quite obviously none at all > lower verdict > higher verdict. Seems like pretty basic logic to me.
It doesn't make sense to argue in favor of A, get a response pointing out that the current law is perfectly consistent with A, and then say, "how can you say that current law is consistent with B?"
Let's say a jury renders a verdict that declares that 5,000 puppies must be brutally executed (ignoring the likely illegality of this for the sake of the hypothetical). Now imagine this dialogue:
Person A: Wow, that's a ridiculous amount of puppies. We really need a society that values adorable puppies more.
Person B: Don't worry as there are statutes for reducing excessive puppy executions. It could very well be far less than 5,000 puppies executed.
Person A: Well, okay, but that's still pretty bad.
Person B: Wow, you're making no sense now. You were advocating for less puppies being executed, not no puppies. Why aren't you happy?
Your objection makes you resemble Person B in this dialogue in my evaluation. Do you see why you might perhaps sound unreasonable?
Dude, I said: "Yes, of course you can, but the point is, you weren't." My point is not that your statements are logically inconsistent, but rather that your statement made no sense as a response to what I said. For example"
In particular, unlike Person A, you did NOT say, "but that's still pretty bad." The conversation was: You: the monetary award should be reduced. Me: The system is set up to do exactly what you want. You: What do you mean? I think the jury should have found in favor of Jones. That is fine, but it is not what you initially claimed. So, do you see why you might perhaps sound unreasonable?
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