So you feel the government should regulate how much a company can be sued for?
Yes, to keep the lawyers in check. Those parasites will sue anyone for any reason if they think they can get a jury to go for it, with no regard for truth or common sense.
And, in the free market system, I still assert, if one is to profit, another must lose.
So your contention is that the country is getting steadily poorer.
That's the result of your position, which requires that in every transaction in which there is a profit, the total amount of wealth either decreases or remains even. If that's the case, then the average individual wealth should decline steadily as the population rises.
And government regulation has nothing to do with it. What you're proposing is that regulation should be a club to use on people rather than on companies. The companies have too much power as it is. Look at the package big insurance bought for itself in HCR.
Regulation already is a club to be used on people. It stifles new businesses, drives people out of their homes and keeps others from getting homes, raises costs on all sorts of things, trapping people in a cycle of poverty and/or forcing them into the corporate treadmill.
And lawsuits have nothing to do with HCR... yet.
If a company does $100,000,000,000 in damages, that company should be responsible for at least $100,000,000,000 in reparations. Limiting its liability forces its responsibility upon the taxpayers. Do you, Kuli, want to pay for the cleanup in the Gulf? I didn't think so.
Who said anything about limiting liability? I was talking about limits on awards.
But limits have to take into account actual responsibility -- that's why I started with making sure the plaintiff gets court costs and time invested in the suit covered. Next would be actual damages, to which there can be no limit -- in fact my version would add 30% to actual damages, that amount to be posted as a bond under control of a neutral entity in case the actual damages turn out to be more than the court/jury decided.
Limits have to come in punitive damages, which I've seen get absolutely ridiculous. But I'd limit lawyer fees as well; I've read where plaintiffs actually end up owing the attorneys after an award. That's covered, I think, in the inclusion of court costs. At the very least, attorneys should get no portion of the award consisting of court costs and actual damages, since those are supposed to be for the plaintiff. If they can't convince the jury there should be punitive damages, their fee would be the regular billing rates, period.
Now in a case of a hundred billion in damages, such as with this spill, we're not just talking individuals -- states are getting in on the act, too. That's a tangle I'm not going to touch. But limiting it to individuals, were I judge and jury, the company would be paying $100 billion in damages, plus $30 billion bond, plus all actual expenses and time compensation for all the people who property got damaged, plus the cost of all the lawyers and investigators and whoever to assess and document the damage, and since I've experiences just how gross some escaped crude can make a person's waterfront, I'd award everyone whose waterfront was dirtied by the stuff another $10k for pain and suffering, plus another $5k for every month it takes to clean the stuff up.
On the other side of the coin, I'd want an investigation into the actions of all the people involved in government approval of that lease and of the platform design, etc.
And if a coin has a third side... and if it was within the power of a judge... I'd have the Coast Guard and Navy offering their services to get the damned thing plugged.