I agree with Wayne on this: everything is worth the price
someone is willing to pay for it. As long as some people with more dollars
than sense are willing to pay upwards of $500 for floormats, he should take the
money and run.
In my other hobby, collecting political
campaign buttons, the same rule apples. Last month I paid $275 for a William
Jennings Bryan campaign button because it was fairly rare. Most people would
think I’m nuts, but in three years it will be worth twice that.
Tony Boatman
Boise, Idaho
57 Dodge CRL D-500
69 Barracuda Convertible
85 Bitter 3.9 SC
From: Forward Look
Mopar Discussion List [mailto:L-FORWARDLOOK@xxxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of Wayne Graefen
Sent: Friday, April 20, 2007 7:42
AM
To: L-FORWARDLOOK@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: [FWDLK] Price insanity-
follow-up
We're having a good discussion here on this topic. But
I may need to make one thing perfectly clear re. my original post.
I have NO disagreement with the seller of these floor
mats. He has likely had to put out a very significant amount of real
paper dollars to get his first quantity of these mats made and the majority of
that was to have molds machined from which they could be produced. The
auction format is an outstanding vehicle to get them to us the buying
public. His starting price is extremely fair and he has no guarantee of
how low bids will stay or how high they may go. This is American
capitalism at its best; the greatest form of business the world has ever
seen. Risk your own money in the market place and reap the results of your
decision to take that risk whether good or bad.
My entire gripe is with people who are absolute fools about
the paper in their wallet. And then there are those hundreds if not
thousands of Ebayer's who have no concept of how auctions work and bid for the
pure fun of bidding and have no intentions whatsoever of ever paying that bid
if it wins. I've had it happen to me.