> Rephrasing: As long as there are two independent people making offers, your choice between the two offers is voluntary. (Do not forget the 3rd option: accept neither offer.)
I then make a very obvious example where there are two independent companies offering similar crappy jobs. Plus your 3rd option.
There's no one person giving the choice, there are two companies and your third option. Perfectly conforming to what you say:
> clearly wrote that the person giving the choice must NOT create the choice
Ok? So there is a situation, a very obvious one, that arises from the conditions that you're claiming making something voluntary. You have two different companies offering substantially the same thing. Now it is voluntary when the outcome is no different from if there were just one company offering the (only) choice.
That is clearly something you will have to explain. I know you can't see how many upvotes a comment has, but I can tell you it doesn't seem like I am the only person who has spotted this.
> And in Sophie's Choice the camp Dr setup both options.
But it is also a term that means "an undesirable decision that has to be made".
Before you accuse other people of not reading, I think it's worthwhile to have a scan for irony.
I then make a very obvious example where there are two independent companies offering similar crappy jobs. Plus your 3rd option.
There's no one person giving the choice, there are two companies and your third option. Perfectly conforming to what you say:
> clearly wrote that the person giving the choice must NOT create the choice
Ok? So there is a situation, a very obvious one, that arises from the conditions that you're claiming making something voluntary. You have two different companies offering substantially the same thing. Now it is voluntary when the outcome is no different from if there were just one company offering the (only) choice.
That is clearly something you will have to explain. I know you can't see how many upvotes a comment has, but I can tell you it doesn't seem like I am the only person who has spotted this.
> And in Sophie's Choice the camp Dr setup both options.
But it is also a term that means "an undesirable decision that has to be made".
Before you accuse other people of not reading, I think it's worthwhile to have a scan for irony.