Re: Is there a run on reloading supplies?
Hi mavrick10_2000,
No worries--I take no offense at this, as I generally try to keep my ego and my emotions out of forum stuff.
Now, I do <span style="text-decoration: underline">not</span> think there is any straw man in my argument. Mine was an argument by analogy, plain and simple. You may contend, and may even rightly contend, that the analogy does not hold (that is to be debated, assuming you're willing), but I don't <span style="font-style: italic">think</span> I ever put words in your mouth or exaggerated your position.
I suppose you may be right that my analogy is imperfect, but I still maintain my position. The better analogy, I guess, is with price gouging at gas pumps when oil prices spike. That practice, by the way, is flatly illegal. I rather suspect it's illegal in this context, too, but I'd have to research that to make sure, and in any case I quite doubt there'd be any enforcement. I also am convinced it is flatly immoral and am not impressed with the quasi-Objectivist habit of perpetrators blaming their victims for being so incautious or foolish. Fools are indeed to be blamed for their foolishness, but those who exploit them are no less to be blamed for their exploitation.
My general principle here, and one that I hold in almost all contexts and will hold to my last day, is that <span style="text-decoration: underline">nothing</span> ever morally exonerates those who exploit the needs, fears or emotions of others to soak them for as much money as they think they can get. This country may not have many laws against such behavior, but God certainly does. And I'm not getting this from being a "whiner," btw; I'm getting it from Aquinas.
Anyway, we are now far off onto a tangent that probably does not help this thread, but if you'd like to continue the conversation over PM, I'm totally game.
Yours,
David
<div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Originally Posted By: mavrick10_2000</div><div class="ubbcode-body">That straw man won't hold water. Telemarketing scams are completely different. This crap has been happening since '94. If one hasn't caught on by now there's not much one can do to help folks see the light. And the information regarding this pattern of pricing has been out there since then as well.
If you don't know the normal price of something and are willing to pay in excess of $60 for one PMAG well then you were willing to pay it - for whatever reason. IMO this is foolish and continues to feed those who you hold contempt for.
If insane pricing irritates you, make mental note of it not to do business with those who "gouge" and cut the whining and hand wringing - <span style="font-weight: bold">not directed at you, but in general the mob mentality comes off as whiny.</span>
Hey here's an idea, prioritize things in your life, buy those items you feel you "need" when they are less expensive (a year or more before any election, not during any natural or man made disaster etc, etc)
Life's hard. It's even harder when your stupid and/or unprepared. I find this applies to life in general. </div></div>
Hi EddieNFL,
Yeah, you know, I think you're right--it was a bad analogy, plus I unintentionally depicted the behavior as something much more extreme than I think it is, so here I must plead <span style="font-style: italic">mea culpa</span>. I think the gas pump price gouging analogy is much closer.
<div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Originally Posted By: EddieNFL</div><div class="ubbcode-body">
Poor analogy. If I put a 5K price on a 2K rifle and you want to buy it, buyer beware. If I approach you and use lies and deceit to sell something, that is fraud.
Theives, scammers, gougers? No. Opportunists? Absolutely.</div></div>