You go to a car dealer & buy a "low-mileage, prime condition" car. You choose the car because it registers 12,000 miles & the dealer tells you that it was driven by a local little-old-lady. You sign the contract and take responsibility for making monthly payments.
Later, you discover that the odometer was rolled back by the dealer (the car really has 150,000 miles), and that the car was purchased by the dealer in New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina (the car had been flooded).
Do the fraudulent representations made to you at time of purchase have any bearing on your financial obligations for the car? If you turn your back on the car, can people accuse you of "supporting financial irresponsibility?"
Well, George W. Bush sold me on a war. And based on his initial representations, I bought and strongly supported it. But since then, I've learned that the things Bush told me are not true (e.g., yellowcake, WMDs, Iraq-9/11 connection, etc.). Do I "support the terrorists"???????
2007-02-24
04:24:01
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10 answers
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asked by
Anonymous
in
Politics