The liver accused of having broken the blood contract on which he insisted

The liver, the very red gentleman who receives what is perhaps the most liberal interpretation of the title “Health and fitness influencer”, is in the midst of what can be described mainly as an extremely mean and deeply stupid trial on an additional. And although the case itself is not very remarkable simply because the guy has been a lot in court lately, he has produced this incredible detail: the king of the liver has signed a blood contract.
According to a complaint filed by Brad Kearns, another self -proclaimed health influencer who claims to hold the world record Guinness for Speedgolfing, he and the king of the liver Brian Johnson spoke of a new supplement for men who are called “male optimization formula” or Mofo. Quick note: it is always good to find the name first, especially with regard to a health product. According to Kearns, to baptize their agreed partnership, they have drawn up an agreement of a page (intelligent, stay simple, no need for legal details). “On Johnson’s insistence, the agreement was signed in the blood,” said the complaint.
In a response to the complaint, the king of the liver and his legal team refuted many details put forward by Kearns. They insist that they have never heard an official Kearns terrain on an supplement. They denied having “any interest in the name of Mofo”. (A little difficult to believe that one, given the King liver company, ancestral supplements, literally sells a product called MOFO.) But what they do not deny is that they have developed an agreement and put their blood there. “The applicants admit that the agreement has been signed and includes blood marking.”
Not that it really matters as much, because these do not seem to be serious people who operate in a kind of good faith, but blood oaths really mean nothing – and there is a legal precedent to prove it. In 2009, a California court judged that a contract written in the blood is not binding and lacks legal position. At most, marking a contract with blood is a symbolic gesture. And clearly, that did not mean as much for the king of the liver as he could have suggested, since he is the one who is accused of breaking it.
He should probably not be shocking that the king of the liver does not seem to be a man of his word or his blood, since he already faces a collective appeal of fans who accuse him of deceiving them on his “ancestral” regime and his effect on his body after it was revealed that he used steroids. Maybe he can ask his company of supplements to whip him a fresh pill and take the edge a little.
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