In article , wrote:
Nope. You claimed extortion, which involves force. I suggest that whoever _forced_ you to do something is the one who performed the extortion.
No, I'm not saying that those things are _unusual_. What does usualness have to do with _extortion_?
Contents of ground meat are specified by law (including maximum amount of fat).
The sign at the pump says so. Why didn't you read it?
You must use a different kind of payphone than all the ones I've seen. Those list their prices (for local calls, and tell you how to get the prices for other calls).
I thought your complaint was about the price your calling card charged, not the phone.
And if you couldn't make a phone call, did somebody go to jail for violating your rights? Policy is a _goal_.
Which law? Actually, the rates were set by filed _tariff_. I believe that the phone company didn't try to file tariffs specifying different rates for different locations.
Did you ask for the rate you'd get using your calling card?
Seth
[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: I think Lisa may have used the word 'extorted' in a loose, general way. You need to understand, Seth, that we do not all speak the Queen's English in everything we say. Part of the fun in our conversations is that we do not need to measure-every- single-word-before-we-use-it. I think almost everyone knows the 'general, everyday casual' use of the word 'extort'. But for those of you who do not, or who wish to make an issue out of the words we use rather than deal with the concept/opinion presented, in this ouvre you are reading now, most readers would generally take 'extort' to mean not only physical force used, or a gun to your head (the most severe forms of extortion, I grant you) but additionally the simple act of arranging things so that if the customer does not 'follow along' with a plan presented, i.e. use _my_ telephone for ten dollars because I do not permit cell phones in my establishment or because I do not permit (by virtue of re-routing the call) the use of _your_ calling card or _your_ toll free number, it simply becomes very inconvenient for the customer to do otherwise. Its not that we could not walk some distance on a cold, snowy night to find a telephone which would respond as we desired, nor do we have any _legal_ right to have a phone wired to our pleasure at our beck and call. And realistically Seth, people do not read; they approach certain situations in life pre-conditioned, to 'know what to expect'. I hope you can deal with that lack of perfection in many people around you. PAT]