If you think it is reasonable that a random person on the internet could produce Phillip's actual signed paperwork, then that speaks volumes about what you consider to be reasonable.
Maybe the information, the evidence, pertaining to the paper work Phillips signed with the State to open and operate his business is esoteric or arcane in the age of the internet. Maybe it isn’t.
Let’s assume the information isn’t, so what? Who is that a problem for then? Jahryn, as he’s based his “ought to” conclusion on presumed factual statements of what the “job” is and the “requirements” of the business, and did so without providing any information as to what the paperwork he signed said or the signed paperwork itself, and apparently he cannot provide it according to your POV. Well, it’s unreasonable to allege factual assertions, lack the evidence to support them as factual, and then go down this bizarre path you have gone down of arguing it’s unreasonable to demand he provide the compelling it to support his asserted factual claims.
Your interjection obfuscates that Jahryn claimed Phillips has a “job” and specific “requirement,” that Phillips failed both, hence, his license should be revoked. He provided no supporting evidence.
And it’s intriguing you interject with the notion what I’m asking for is unreasonable, because, presumably, it cannot be easily discovered, and while not providing evidence that could be just as adequate as that which was requested, as if my point was to intentionally set the bar so high as to be nearly impossible to reach. My point was he’s pulled those assertions of fact about what the “job” is and the “requirements” from his arse, and he can show his claim to be right with evidence but hasn’t.
But I said in my last post some “physical evidence” is needed, not necessarily the “signed” documents.