Looking back at it, you are probably right in your interpretation, and I
think that the judge is likely to agree with you. I didn't withdraw the
CFJ (and I couldn't now, anyway) because I think there could be other
interpretations, and it can't hurt to get it down in writing.
Jason Cobb
On 6/
Oops. Yes, I did indeed. Sorry about that, and thanks for catching the
error.
-Aris
On Fri, Jun 14, 2019 at 9:27 PM Jason Cobb wrote:
> > Telling someone that they aren’t allowed to do something does limit
> there ability to do it
>
> Did you mean that it _doesn't_ limit their ability to do it
> Telling someone that they aren’t allowed to do something does limit
there ability to do it
Did you mean that it _doesn't_ limit their ability to do it?
Jason Cobb
On 6/15/19 12:25 AM, Aris Merchant wrote:
I think you’re misunderstanding what the word “limit” means (or at least
what it’s int
I think you’re misunderstanding what the word “limit” means (or at least
what it’s intended to mean, which may be different from what we’ll
interpret it to mean). Telling someone that they aren’t allowed to do
something does limit there ability to do it, it only limits the
permissibility of doing s
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