French are weird

S

SlitheryDee

The legal argument is based on the union Lang law, which restricts price cuts on the books offered by retailers. The irony of this tactic is that the law Lang aims to preserve the diversity of cultural creation and give booksellers ways to offer a wide selection of books, not just the best-sellers.

Is that so bad? A wide selection of books besides best sellers? I'm not really for this sort of thing but amazon's own statement turned me against them this time.
 

dawp

Lifer
Jul 2, 2005
11,347
2,710
136
I don't see anything wrong with the french law as it protects the small independent sellers and we all know what happen when the likes of a Walmart move into a small town. small independent can't compete and are forced out of buisness and we lose a diverse market place.
 

Jeff7

Lifer
Jan 4, 2001
41,596
20
81
Originally posted by: dawp
I don't see anything wrong with the french law as it protects the small independent sellers and we all know what happen when the likes of a Walmart move into a small town. small independent can't compete and are forced out of business and we lose a diverse market place.
Of course, it is because of the voluntary choosing of consumers to shop at the big businesses that the smaller ones go out of business.
 

KMFJD

Lifer
Aug 11, 2005
33,160
52,886
136
Originally posted by: Jeff7
Originally posted by: dawp
I don't see anything wrong with the french law as it protects the small independent sellers and we all know what happen when the likes of a Walmart move into a small town. small independent can't compete and are forced out of business and we lose a diverse market place.
Of course, it is because of the voluntary choosing of consumers to shop at the big businesses that the smaller ones go out of business.

:roll:
 

Jeff7

Lifer
Jan 4, 2001
41,596
20
81
Originally posted by: KMFJD
Originally posted by: Jeff7
Originally posted by: dawp
I don't see anything wrong with the french law as it protects the small independent sellers and we all know what happen when the likes of a Walmart move into a small town. small independent can't compete and are forced out of business and we lose a diverse market place.
Of course, it is because of the voluntary choosing of consumers to shop at the big businesses that the smaller ones go out of business.

:roll:
What? It is. If Walmart comes to a town, and "all" of the people truly oppose it, no one will shop there, the store will be unprofitable, corporate headquarters will close it down, and it will go away.
People vote with their dollars. If they keep spending money at the big stores, they're in effect saying, "We want this store here. Our 'principles' about supporting small businesses are easily swayed by slightly cheaper crappy merchandise."
 

zinfamous

No Lifer
Jul 12, 2006
111,878
31,392
146
Originally posted by: Jeff7
Originally posted by: KMFJD
Originally posted by: Jeff7
Originally posted by: dawp
I don't see anything wrong with the french law as it protects the small independent sellers and we all know what happen when the likes of a Walmart move into a small town. small independent can't compete and are forced out of business and we lose a diverse market place.
Of course, it is because of the voluntary choosing of consumers to shop at the big businesses that the smaller ones go out of business.

:roll:
What? It is. If Walmart comes to a town, and "all" of the people truly oppose it, no one will shop there, the store will be unprofitable, corporate headquarters will close it down, and it will go away.
People vote with their dollars. If they keep spending money at the big stores, they're in effect saying, "We want this store here. Our 'principles' about supporting small businesses are easily swayed by slightly cheaper crappy merchandise."

:thumbsup:

never a clearer indication of the lower standards that the ave American has adopted over the last couple of decades.
 

ElFenix

Elite Member
Super Moderator
Mar 20, 2000
102,402
8,574
126
Originally posted by: SlitheryDee
The legal argument is based on the union Lang law, which restricts price cuts on the books offered by retailers. The irony of this tactic is that the law Lang aims to preserve the diversity of cultural creation and give booksellers ways to offer a wide selection of books, not just the best-sellers.

Is that so bad? A wide selection of books besides best sellers? I'm not really for this sort of thing but amazon's own statement turned me against them this time.

amazon sells a wide variety of books besides the best sellers. the law was written when grocery stores started selling books and discounting them by large amounts. all they sold was high volume books. amazon probably sells the widest variety of books in france, which is the ironic part. so now the law is just being used to keep an inefficient business model alive, without the saving grace of preserving the diversity of cultural creation etc.
 

sandorski

No Lifer
Oct 10, 1999
70,801
6,357
126
I don't find this strange at all. The Law seems well thought out and fair to all. If Amazon wants to differentiate itself, their Selection, convenience of being Online, and fast Delivery all work in their favour over most B&M counterparts. If they need Lower Prices to compete, they're not Marketing themselves very well.
 

Argo

Lifer
Apr 8, 2000
10,045
0
0
Anybody read "Atlas Shrugged"? If not I recommend it, it kind of deals with similar situation.