from the update 4-9-18 "We have had interest in
Post# of 9123
"We have had interest in the technology from companies in France, Spain, Turkey, Serbia, South Africa, and China. The interest varies from licensing arrangements, purchase, and through direct representation of our products."
At a minimum the interest was specific enough for the companies to specify what type of arrangement- licensing arrangements, purchase, and through direct representation of our products- the companies were interested in.
Again, I dont think people have any idea of what goes into a negotiation-the research or the process. Its not a video game.
For a company to specify what type of arrangement they are interested in meant those companies did enough research to make those comparisons and selected a spokesperson to communicate w NNLX and approval of the type of arrangement came through channels,very possibly all the way to the board of the companies which specified their interest.
There is no comparison between this real life process and the fictional example of NNLX sending a blind email which companies simply could mark a box that they were interested. Its not the third grade where a raging introvert might send that type of email "check this box if you're interested".
In a negotiation every word matters-it takes somebody who can think on their feet not to make a careless statement to the opposite party,because it will take a lot of effort to confront the other parties conception or misconception of such a statement.
So a chosen spokesperson will communicate what bosses all the way to the board have cleared him to say.
I think people have lost the ability to think though i've seen this my entire life. In fact the powers that be do everything in their brainwashing power to eliminate a thinking populace -such a thing is anathema to them bc it makes their job -to control and manipulate the populace at will -that much harder. They turn even leaders into robots through the brainwashing of their training. Leaders who no concept of analytical thinking but instead have relied on such crutch skills as speed reading or a photographic memory