Diane & Diezel
Diezel Diezel
You know, I was reading about that new ESG rule that forces companies to report on human‑rights violations. It got me thinking about how the law can actually protect the powerless. What do you think?
Diane Diane
That's a good point. The law can be a real lever, but it only works if the reporting is thorough and the penalties are real. Without that, companies just file and move on. If you see any gaps, we can draft stronger compliance clauses that actually hold them accountable. It’s all about turning policy into enforceable practice.
Diezel Diezel
You’re right, the law only matters if the penalties bite. If there’s a gap, I’ll cut it open and make the clauses unforgiving. Let’s turn that policy into a real threat.
Diane Diane
Sounds like a plan. I’ll tighten the language so the only choice left is to comply, not to try to dodge. Let’s make sure the threat is legal, not just a bluff.
Diezel Diezel
Nice, let’s tighten it up. If we can make the law bite hard, they’ll have to play it straight. No more dodging, just straight compliance or straight penalties. Ready to lay it down.
Diane Diane
Got it. I’ll draft clauses that leave no wiggle room—penalties that are clear, immediate, and enforceable. Let’s make sure they can’t escape once we hit the trigger.