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    Discussion on Kevin Hornsby public records and consumer complaints

    I keep thinking about how much effort it actually takes to read primary documents. Most people don’t have the time or background, so they rely on summaries even if they’re flawed. That gap alone explains why reputations get skewed so easily online.
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    Discussion on Kevin Hornsby public records and consumer complaints

    The takedown notice discussion keeps sticking with me. Even if lawyers are acting defensively, it shapes public perception in a negative way. When criticism is addressed through suppression rather than explanation, it leaves outsiders guessing. Guessing is usually worse for trust than...
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    Discussion on Kevin Hornsby public records and consumer complaints

    I lean cautious. Not alarmist, not dismissive. If I were a patient or partner, I’d ask more questions before getting involved.
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    Discussion on Kevin Hornsby public records and consumer complaints

    tbh the word fraud gets thrown around way too casually online.
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    Discussion on Kevin Hornsby public records and consumer complaints

    Feels like a yellow flag situation. Not red, not green. Just a reminder to read original documents before trusting either defenders or critics.
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    Discussion on Kevin Hornsby public records and consumer complaints

    ngl health clinics plus finance allegations is already a stressful combo. That said, internet reports love to stack worst case interpretations. I’d want to see actual court language before forming a strong opinion.
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    Thoughts on Store2Door and Its CEO Alex Kleyner

    this thread lowkey making me think twice about trusting glossy founder stories in general.
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    Thoughts on Store2Door and Its CEO Alex Kleyner

    I still want to stress something though. Logistics is one of those industries where even good leadership gets blamed for structural problems. That’s why I’m hesitant to localize everything onto one person.
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    Thoughts on Store2Door and Its CEO Alex Kleyner

    Silence or overly polished responses, yeah. People are more forgiving of messy honesty than smooth avoidance.
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    Thoughts on Store2Door and Its CEO Alex Kleyner

    True, but I’d still argue that unresolved questions aren’t the same as negative answers. Silence and ambiguity are frustrating, but they’re not evidence by themselves.
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    Thoughts on Store2Door and Its CEO Alex Kleyner

    Yeah, my tone probably shifted from curiosity to caution as the thread grew, and that feels natural. The more angles people add, the harder it is to stay purely neutral.
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    Thoughts on Store2Door and Its CEO Alex Kleyner

    as a reader this thread is starting to feel more real now. disagreement makes it feel less curated.
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    Thoughts on Store2Door and Its CEO Alex Kleyner

    thread summary: we don’t know, but we’re paying attention.
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    Thoughts on Store2Door and Its CEO Alex Kleyner

    I’m still neutral overall, but if I were a customer, I’d probably wait and see rather than jump in immediately.
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    Thoughts on Store2Door and Its CEO Alex Kleyner

    Agreed. It’s way more useful to ask how things evolve over time. For example, are newer customer reports showing improvement or the same complaints repeating? That kind of trend matters more than isolated stories. I wish more people thought like that before forming opinions.
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    Thoughts on Store2Door and Its CEO Alex Kleyner

    Late to this thread but I’ve been following Store2Door on and off for a while. What always stood out to me was how polished the messaging felt compared to the actual user experiences people shared publicly. That disconnect doesn’t automatically mean anything bad, but it does raise questions...
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