Contract Law

Keith589
Level 2
England, United Kingdom

Contract Law

Hello Community

Is there anyone else out there refusing to agree to the wearing of masks and social-distancing

My account is unable to function unless I agree.

My view is that Contracts are only binding when all parties have agreed after full-disclosure

I have no intention of agreeing to this policy.

Which means by disabling my business from functioning through a Dictatorial policy

based ONLY on Airbnb's perspectives this is a breach of Contract

 

Does anyone have any advice, aside from agreeing and then ignoring the  said agreement,

not sure I wish to descend to their level.

 

Keith Dennis

 

20 Replies 20

@Keith589  No thank you for anti-science, covid-denier videos. I won't debate you on this topic.

 

No one "likes" wearing a mask. That you decided if I agree with wearing them means that I enjoy it, or that I do so because I was told to, and am not informed about their efficacy, that's just condescendingly offensive and  pretty common among those with your attitude- inferring whatever you choose to.

 

Funny, though, how doctors and nurses have been wearing them since humans became aware of how diseases are transferred, with no ill effects to their immune systems.

Contract law....blah blah blah. Your argument lacks so much that I won't waste my energy to point out what's wrong with it. There's a simple answer here: Leave the platform. 

You have made a CHOICE to be on the AirBnB platform. If it no longer suits your needs, leave. Very simple. 

Louise0
Level 10
New South Wales, Australia

Gosh, who knew The Donald had a British love child?

 

 

@Louise0  Thx for my laugh of the day. 

Louise0
Level 10
New South Wales, Australia

Actually, now I've checked out Keith's profile, I reckon it must have been Fred who played the away game 😉

@Keith589 You've misunderstood a really important thing about the legal concept of a contract : as a host, you don't have continuous contract with Airbnb. Rather, you have a series of individual contracts that apply only to the specific bookings made at the time the terms were active.

 

Each booking is a contract. You're obliged to  fulfill the terms of that contract as it was when that booking was confirmed. If the listing service changes the terms for future contracts, you have to decide whether you'll agree to that or render the contracts null and void.

 

I'm not convinced that you're any more of an expert on contract law than you are on epidemiology.