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Multiple Contract Question
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<blockquote data-quote="bacha29" data-source="post: 1990191" data-attributes="member: 58386"><p>Mr Trakker: Your comments were just another long winded explaination of the same reality. First of all the only reason you are in this and it's your own admission is to make a killing by selling out in 3-5 years. Another "Fastbuck Freddy. I am sorry to tell you that the model does not in any way shape or form exist for the purpose of creating contractor equity. You exist for one purpose and one purpose only and that is to feed the Fedex addiction to cheap trucking and cheap labor and the greatest disservice you could to yourself is to believe otherwise and the contact terms bear it out. You have only one customer and tasked with feeding that addiction and if you can't do it they will get somebody who tells them he can. You talk about the help of an attorney, say hello to a cold hard fact. Upon the conversion to ISP you will so called "negotiate' a new contract with X but and here's the good part. You will not, that's right will NOT be permitted to have your attorney present during the "negotiation". An accused criminal as as part of due process is allowed to have an attorney present but not when it comes to "negotiate" a contract. Moreover the vast majority of the items on the agenda for negotiation are"non- negotiable". You seem like a decent person but you keep trying to apply basic business theory but you don't have the balanced contract terms needed to do so. They might play around with you a little bit but in the end they will accept nothing less that absolute power and control. I mean look at the daily work experience. This is when you start. This is when you stop. This is what you drive This is what you wear. This is where you go. This is how you do it. And oh by the way you are an independent contractorDan Sullivan created his version of an"indepedent contractor' solely for the purpose of having a party upon whom he can dump as much risk ,liability, and variable costs as he could possibly dump on them. Some day you will get tired of it as well . You too will "gleefully" sell to some one . Not because you made a big profit, forget about that but rather simply because you found somebody willing to take it off your hands.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="bacha29, post: 1990191, member: 58386"] Mr Trakker: Your comments were just another long winded explaination of the same reality. First of all the only reason you are in this and it's your own admission is to make a killing by selling out in 3-5 years. Another "Fastbuck Freddy. I am sorry to tell you that the model does not in any way shape or form exist for the purpose of creating contractor equity. You exist for one purpose and one purpose only and that is to feed the Fedex addiction to cheap trucking and cheap labor and the greatest disservice you could to yourself is to believe otherwise and the contact terms bear it out. You have only one customer and tasked with feeding that addiction and if you can't do it they will get somebody who tells them he can. You talk about the help of an attorney, say hello to a cold hard fact. Upon the conversion to ISP you will so called "negotiate' a new contract with X but and here's the good part. You will not, that's right will NOT be permitted to have your attorney present during the "negotiation". An accused criminal as as part of due process is allowed to have an attorney present but not when it comes to "negotiate" a contract. Moreover the vast majority of the items on the agenda for negotiation are"non- negotiable". You seem like a decent person but you keep trying to apply basic business theory but you don't have the balanced contract terms needed to do so. They might play around with you a little bit but in the end they will accept nothing less that absolute power and control. I mean look at the daily work experience. This is when you start. This is when you stop. This is what you drive This is what you wear. This is where you go. This is how you do it. And oh by the way you are an independent contractorDan Sullivan created his version of an"indepedent contractor' solely for the purpose of having a party upon whom he can dump as much risk ,liability, and variable costs as he could possibly dump on them. Some day you will get tired of it as well . You too will "gleefully" sell to some one . Not because you made a big profit, forget about that but rather simply because you found somebody willing to take it off your hands. [/QUOTE]
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