Originally posted by: AmusedOne
Originally posted by: MacBaine
Nope, you'd have cornered the market. Good for you. No where in the Constitution are you guaranteed "fair" prices on event tickets, or processors, for that matter. If the person is charging too high of a price, people will stop buying them. Scalpers and resellers are successful because people are stupid enough to pay their prices. Your beef is with the stupid people, not the people making a buck off of them.
I didn't ask whether it's in the constitution or not. I'm asking, if Intel, the main provider of the chip chose to sell it at $50, then I bought all of them and charged $5000, you wouldn't have any problem with this at all? Not one bit?
Let's put it another way. You go to a computer show where they are handing out free copies of the coolest new game or whatever, and it won't ever be released in the stores. Say me and my friends work there, and we talk to some people and we manage to get all of the games to ourselves before they are given out. So then we go out and we are selling them in the parking lot for $100. This wouldn't bother you in the least? You came expecting this free game, and only to find out that we took them all and are selling them for $100. Keep in mind, you REALLY wanted this game. You had been looking foreward to it for years. Even if you thought this game was worth $100, you didn't have $100 to spend on it. Tell me again, this would not bother you one bit? You wouldn't be mad or upset at me for taking them all and selling them?
Yep, I'd think you're a prick and I'd not buy the game. However, I wouldn't ever think to use laws to FORCE you to sell what was rightfully yours at a price *I* determine is "fair."
As for the Intel question, I'd just wait for you to go out of business, and buy a chip from the guy who bought your inventory, then priced it at a reasonable level. Intel ALREADY sells their chips at lower prices than you see at retail. It's up to the RETAIL BUSINESS to set the price. Intel can only suggest a retail price. Go to pricewatch.com and see the vast variation in prices on Intel chips.
When will people learn out there that DEMAND sets the price of an item. Not "fairness," not whining, but demand. A person has the right to charge as much as they want for an item. If the demand is there, it will sell, if not, it wont and he'll have to lower his prices. Either way, price controls NEVER work and only create more problems than they tried to address.