So on the one hand you say Tavo has no leg to stand on because he didn't live up to the rights contract because he didn't get the sanctioning fee paid by the investors on time, and that was his responsibility (even though the investors later admitted they had the money to pay Ecclestone on time)...and then on the other hand you say it's ok, because fundraising is hard, that the investors failed to meet and ignored outright many deadlines and clauses in the contract that they themselves agreed to?WilliamsF1 wrote:hairy_scotsman wrote:He signed over 3/4 of his baby to these guys in return for them doing something they ended up not doing...and somehow he's the bad guy?
I think they are doing enough and have done enough.
One needs to understand that raising money for a venture such as F1 is not easy. You must have visited a site like Statesmen blog to understand the negativity that F1 is bringing. This is the same sceptism investors have about F1. Red himself has said that the track is not going to make tat much money and it is more about owning something unique.
With this background, the last thing I would want from a guy sitting on his butt (coz he got the contract for the main show and holing the cards) is to be asking me on an daily basis "show me the money". I will be cheesed if someone does that to me, and if he starts to talk some contract to me, I will be all the more cheesed. Tevo should have been the company player and supported the compay tooth and nail rather and crying to bernie that he got screwed. He got screwed for a reason, and the the reason, being out of place.
That's what Epstein is known for. Fundraising. That and making the money grow. Supposed to be some kind of guru. He gets a pass because F1 is somehow hard to raise money for?
From what I can tell, Tavo didn't start asking where the money was until the lack of money was endangering the project. What's unreasonable about that?
...and if they had the money like they claimed they did, then why did they withhold payment? How can that be pinned on Hellmund?
I have a feeling these guys weren't Hellmund's first choice as investors at all, but circumstances forced him to settle for them.
Serious question: Have you read the petition?
ETA: I know all about the naysayers on the Statesman comments sections. They are a very vocal, very small minority who often use multiple handles to make their numbers appear greater than they are. I know because I've been on there setting the record straight in opposition to them since day 1 of this thing. They practically live at City Hall and oppose everything under the sun...all 10 of them. When we were down there with COTA speaking in favor of the endorsement, we called them CAVE...Citizens Against Virtually Everything. We outnumbered them 3-1 when we didn't try at all, and 15-1 when we made even the slightest effort.
Also, if you knew anything about Hellmund at all, you'd know he isn't the lazy, sit-around type. Far from it. The guy is as high-energy as they come,and he has supported the company tooth and nail, even after he was set aside and stopped getting paychecks and was stiffed at two buyout closings.