|
Re: Pentecostals Don't Drink The Water in Memphis!
Maybe this car dealer was under the mindset that as long as he was selling cars to real people, in the name of the actual real person, it didn't matter what the real person he sold the car(s) to actually did with the cars once they left the lot.
Maybe he thought this was an example of the wicked laying up their riches for the righteous.
Prayer is necessary, but so is a good lawyer. This accusation might be very difficult to prove in court.
I am indulging my own speculations.
If this car dealer sold cars to the real people who can be positively identified by the real names used, how can he be held legally liable for what the real people did with their cars?
It is not against the law to sell a car to someone with the knowledge that the buyer is going to give that car to someone else.
Facilitating the giving of gifts is not money laundering.
The above is typed from the point of view of a person who believes that heaven and hell will be decided on a few technicalities.
Even if he knowingly facilitated this kind of "gift giving", he may be unethical, but is he a law breaker?
Does the law hold drug needle makers and bong makers liable for what their end users do with the needles and bongs?
Capitalism rarely involes a sense of ethics that would hold the manufacturer or even seller of goods responsible for the actions of the end user.
__________________
"The choices we make reveal the true nature of our character."
Last edited by Jermyn Davidson; 11-03-2012 at 11:33 AM.
|