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On 4 Sep 2005 05:52:06 -0700, "Stagger Leechildraper"
wrote: There was a gas station owner interviewed on a national tv news broadcast ( he was an obvious foreigner, India, or someplace like that) and admitted he increased the price to keep people from buying gasoline. And get this, he said he might increase it more (it was already over $3 a gallon!)! So yeah, they are gouging us for gasoline. Pricing anything, including gasoline, according to the Law of Supply and Demand is not "gouging." If that station owner had priced his (and that is the operative word - "his") gasoline too high, he wouldn't have sold any. And if he didn't want to sell all of his (there's that word again) gasoline at something more than his replacement cost, why should he have to? When YOU have something for sale that is suddenly much more in demand, and there is much less of a supply of it, you will sell it at a much higher price too - your labor, for example, or your real estate, or your wheat crop, or your rare Rembrandt painting, or your ... gasoline. -- Robert Sturgeon Summum ius summa inuria. http://www.vistech.net/users/rsturge/ |
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