DGT must be excellent and shrewd business people to survive in the nascent
LENR reactor business.



What you should have said in your comparisons between the way past and
present businesses are run was that the nature of shrewd business practice
has not changed at all over the years.



I am sure the good companies like General Electric (GE) or The Boeing
Company would have treated you in the same way because that is how business
that is done well works. Be a smiling warrior and take your licks with
grace; just look forward to a time when you have the edge.




On Mon, Apr 7, 2014 at 9:59 PM, Jed Rothwell <jedrothw...@gmail.com> wrote:

> Axil Axil <janap...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
> When Rossi decided to leave DGT holding the bag by pulling out of the
>> deal, DGT was faced with a forced closure of their operation.
>>
>
> As far as I know, he pulled out because they said they would pay him a
> large sum of money, but they did not. That is a perfectly good reason to
> pull out of a business deal. People do that all the time.
>
> DGT owes me a small sum of money, $1,400. They said many times that they
> would pay, then they made up a series of absurd excuses for not paying,
> then they told me they *had* paid, by wire transfer. I told them they
> must have wired the money to the wrong person. (That is preposterous; that
> never happens.) So, that leaves two possibilities:
>
> 1. Defkalion is broke. They can't even pay $1,400, never mind the millions
> they owed to Ross.
>
> 2. Defkalion has money but they are a bunch of crooks and deadbeats.
>
> The language they use, the stalling tactics, and the ridiculous excuses
> they gave me point to the latter. But I wouldn't know. I am not a
> credit-rating agency. I have not investigated them. Knowing only what I
> know, I would not recommend lending them money or signing contracts with
> them.
>
> - Jed
>
>

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