The city can't just go around and rip up any contract it doesn't like. Or that now has unfavorable terms. I'm not saying this isn't due to corruption, but that needs to be proven. Because where is the line, who decides what's "obviously" due to corruption, and not just someone being stupid, short-sighted or favoring a quick win now over someone else's problem tomorrow?
Would you enter into a contract with the city (in good faith) if you knew that if that contract becomes unpopular, or is seen as unfavorable, the city might just rip it up? How much profit is too much profit?
Prove that the contract is unlawful, then rip it up.
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u/GodIsInTheBathtub 16d ago
The city can't just go around and rip up any contract it doesn't like. Or that now has unfavorable terms. I'm not saying this isn't due to corruption, but that needs to be proven. Because where is the line, who decides what's "obviously" due to corruption, and not just someone being stupid, short-sighted or favoring a quick win now over someone else's problem tomorrow?
Would you enter into a contract with the city (in good faith) if you knew that if that contract becomes unpopular, or is seen as unfavorable, the city might just rip it up? How much profit is too much profit?
Prove that the contract is unlawful, then rip it up.