<< um besides be happy with your 3 and go #@% yourself you greedy prick! you have no legal ground to stand on. >>
Yeah, i guess i'm a greedy prick. This is a hot deal and that's the nature of the beast?
<< i don't see why you'd need a ton anyways, besides for ebay purposes. >>
There are other purposes too. I actually put on monthly raffles at my church to raise money for youth fellowship activities. Just 2 weeks ago we raised great money for our chinese new years party raffling off deals i found here on the net like the Apex DVD player deal.
<< you have no legal ground to stand on. >>
I'm not asking for a lawsuit. I know it's withing their right to "refuse service to anyone" but:
1. I haven't made 1 purchase from that particular store.
2. It wasn't an advertised loss leader where they say x per customer.
3. I made the purchase directly from CC.com which that same manager immediately cancelled out.
by the way i see that he said it's cancelled out, but so far my credit card is still charged.
I understand limiting quantities for item to get customers through the door, but this was not an advertised item. I gave him an example that if i bought batteries, would he limit the quantity, he said it was not a valid analogy, which i too believe is unfair. So i asked him what about some telephones that were $70, he hesitated for a second then said no.
The truth is if i just walked in and wanted to buy 5 32" TV's he'd jump in and help me in a heart beat. But because found out that the price of the camera was actually lower than as advertised, he refused (csa from the first store told him the discounted price).
Business wise, doesn't it make sense to sell your whole inventory regardless of who buys it (unless you lower the price and advertise to lure people in your store)?
Call me greedy, that's why i'm here in the Hot Deals Forum