Honestly sounds like they are pretty skeptical about sovcit methods.
It reads like someone who has tried to sovcit and is getting fed up failing instead of someone who wants proof before being pulled down into the muck, but applying any kind of rigour is a good sign for them escaping.
Skeptical but also willing to pay them $7000.
I mean they didn’t say “you’ll only get it if it works.”
“Only if it works” seems implied in the “start to finish” and the “I will learn it when my car is discharged.”
Seems like he’s willing to pay for a step by step method that someone can prove works.
Yup, sovcits aren’t known for their critical thinking skills, but this seems like a good example of those. Demand proof instead of trusting legalese 3rd party forms of dubious origin.
Was thinking the same… they sound too smart to be real sovcits, they started to smell the BS. Those $7000 are like the million prize for proving the supernatural… that unsurprisingly nobody claimed.
Turns out if you simply send a check or online payment for the amount due to your lender each month they can’t repo your car. It’s naval law or whatever.
Just leave the headlights on overnight, duh
Yeah. I also took it to mean discharge the battery, but I figured it was an electric car.
It only makes it slightly more confusing.
It’s not about discharging the battery? Then what the hell is it about?
Discharging debt.
I’m still confused. Why is a car involved?
The idea is to buy a car on credit, then discharge the debt by sending the right legalese mumbo-jumbo documents in to force the US government to pay the loan back for you. Or force the bank to accept a quarter as full repayment since you signed in red ink or something.
Plot twist: they’re gonna discharge their 7000 dollar debt with a promissory note