Vindicarre wrote:
I guess I'll have to walk through it...
You stated:
Arathain Kelvar wrote:
Rynar wrote:
Anyone who's liabilities out-stripe their assets is, in fact, bankrupt.
This is wrong. You're talking about insolvency.
I provided a definition of bankruptcy that included insolvency; hence, insolvency is considered bankruptcy.
Here's more:
Thesaurus.com wrote:
Main Entry: insolvent
Part of Speech: adjective
Definition: financially ruined
Synonyms: bankrupt, broke*, broken, busted, failed, foreclosed, in Chapter 11, in Chapter 13, in receivership, in the red, indebted, lost, on the rocks, out of money, strapped, taken to the cleaners, unbalanced, undone, wiped out
Antonyms: moneyed, rich, solvent, wealthy
* = informal/non-formal usage
Main Entry: bankrupt
Part of Speech: adjective
Definition: unable to pay debts
Synonyms: broke, depleted, destitute, exhausted, failed, impoverished, in Chapter 11, insolvent , lacking, lost, out of business, ruined, spent, tapped out
Antonyms: rich, solvent, wealthy
They are considered to be synonymous case closed.
Which, on several occasions, I've agreed with based on that definition, which I have not argued against.
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Yet, you chose to argue the point by using "in the real world"...
True.
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You provided your own definition of bankruptcy:
Arathain Kelvar wrote:
Again, bankrupt is a state of being, where your assets are divided amongst your creditors.
That sounds an awful lot like "If you file for bankruptcy, you are bankrupt" to me, your assertions aside.
You're being a bit disingenuous there. Since that post, I have made 14 others. Why are you choosing to ignore the vast majority of the conversation?
In those posts, I have provided the following:
Me wrote:
Nobody is considered bankrupt in the real world if they can meet their financial obligations.
A quote from another dictionary that provides a clarification on the "insolvent debtor":
Me quoting a dictionary wrote:
bank·rupt [bangk-ruhpt, -ruhpt] Show IPA
noun
1.
Law . a person who upon his or her own petition or that of his or her creditors is adjudged insolvent by a court and whose property is administered for and divided among his or her creditors under a bankruptcy law.
2.
any insolvent debtor; a person unable to satisfy any just claims made upon him or her.
3.
a person who is lacking in a particular thing or quality: a moral bankrupt.
The following clarifications about my opinion of your definition:
Me wrote:
1) It's a definition that is not used for anything in the real world.
2) There are contradictory/clarified/more specific definitions that match real-world uses.
3) It doesn't make any sense (examples provided of why this would not make any sense in the real world).
And this summary:
Me wrote:
So, to sum up - I'm not arguing with the definition at all. I'm providing discussion on how things actually work. Things don't work the way they were defined in that particular dictionary (again, found a different definition elsewhere). As I stated, it wouldn't even make sense to do so.
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Further, I pointed out Chapter 13 bankruptcy which allows you to keep your assets.
Correct, by restructuring your debt obligations, allowing you meet these revised obligations, within a time frame given.
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Now you want to see an example of an entity that "is declared bankrupt while making required debt payments".
No, that's not what I said, you are being disingenuous. I'm not arguing that, and specifically said otherwise. What I said was:
Me wrote:
Show me in the real world where someone is declared bankrupt while making required debt payments, simply because their liabilities exceed their assets, and you win.
Bolded for importance. This was the original point I argued against all the way back from Rynar's post. Simply having liabilities exceed your assets does not mean bankruptcy in the real world. Bankruptcy means you are unable or unwilling to meet your payment obligations, from a general sense.
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Again, I'll show you Chapter 13. The whole point of Chapter 13 is to repay debts. When a Chapter 13 bankruptcy is adjudicated, that entity is declared bankrupt - while repaying their debts.
No, you're missing the point. In order to file for Chapter 13 protection, and keep their assets, the debtor must develop a new plan on how they will repay their obligations, and then their obligations are revised. They generally (and I don't know if there are exceptions to this) have to show they can't meet their obligations as they exist. Thus, they cannot meet their current debt payment obligations and go into bankruptcy. Once in bankruptcy, the obligations are revised per Chapter 13.