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Based on what I read, it seems as if the state of New York was negligent. If it were your business, would you just sit back and accept what happened? Did you guys actually read that article? It was not about the 9/11 attacks, but the lack of help to clean up afterwards.
If a bomb blew up in front of your house and damaged everything around it, and the city cleaned up and fixed every house but yours, or some houses and not yours, how would you feel?
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Originally posted by Bob Chebat Based on what I read, it seems as if the state of New York was negligent. If it were your business, would you just sit back and accept what happened? Did you guys actually read that article? It was not about the 9/11 attacks, but the lack of help to clean up afterwards.
If a bomb blew up in front of your house and damaged everything around it, and the city cleaned up and fixed every house but yours, or some houses and not yours, how would you feel?
I agree. But when it comes to anything 9-11, we must forgo normal operating procedures I guess. Business is business. This doesn't tarnish the sacrifices anyone made. Just a business move and judging by the article, there is some foundation to it.
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Originally posted by Bob Chebat Based on what I read, it seems as if the state of New York was negligent. If it were your business, would you just sit back and accept what happened? Did you guys actually read that article? It was not about the 9/11 attacks, but the lack of help to clean up afterwards.
If a bomb blew up in front of your house and damaged everything around it, and the city cleaned up and fixed every house but yours, or some houses and not yours, how would you feel?
But did the City make the building an entire loss, or would it have been an entire loss regardless of who did the cleanup? My guess is the building was a total loss, anyway, and Deutche Bank could have done little themselves.
If small businesses and apartment owners were not allowed in the "zone", why should a big business have been treated any differently?