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Nanna's avatar
1dEdited

And what happens if they don't pay these bills? My guess is that no one from the elite in DK has actually paid such a bill yet!

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Nanna's avatar

How can we be sure that the recipients actually read the NOL letter? They might read the first line and then throw it in the trash can - or a secretary could do that.

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Flemming Blicher's avatar

Hi Nanna

You cant be sure. But legally their are bound if they have received (and signed the reception).

If they throw it in the trash can, they still will get a new reminder after some weeks. After about a month or two, the reminders become bills to pay. Quite hefty bills, by the way.

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Hans Vestergaard's avatar

As I understand it, you have to make a NOL against the person who makes a claim against you. A company is not a legal person, but a service employee in the company is the legal person who makes a claim based on a contract.

And if they claim there is a contract, they must also be able to show it, otherwise they are making claims without a contract, which is fraud.

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Flemming Blicher's avatar

No. There is a couple of mistakes in your comments.

A NoL is not necessarily because someone has a made a claim against you. Yes indirectly, because they have participated in parasiting on you and making you do something (take vaccine) or pay something (for instance by installing a smart meter that makes your electricity bill higher). But what is the initiation of you wanting to send a NoL? You want to make the people who subject you to damage (either physical og economical) responsible for what they have done. That ends up in some hefty bills.

A company IS a legal person in their fraudulent system. That is how they make you subject to merchant law by making real humans into legal fictions/persons. And since a company can also be a legal person it is not hard to see that there is something wrong with this system, seen from a human perspective.

You wrote: "And if they claim there is a contract, they must also be able to show it, otherwise they are making claims without a contract, which is fraud."

What do you mean? Who do you mean is claiming a contract?

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Hans Vestergaard's avatar

As I see it.

A company doesn't say or do anything, it's people who do everything and it's people who are responsible for everything.

And as I understand it, should a NOL be addressed to a person?

Who do you mean is claiming a contract?

The person in front of you or the name on the letter, sea and commercial law is based on a contract where you give up constitutional/human rights and if there is no contract, you hold your ground and keep your constitutional/human rights.

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Flemming Blicher's avatar

I dont think have have said or written that NoL should be addressed to a company. It is always addressed to a named person (human). However, that person can easily be in charge of a company (e.g. Radius or The Royal House) and then that can be the address used to send the NoL to a certain person (human).

But regardles of this, companies can in their system be a legal person (fiction),

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