MrPopo wrote:
By this logic, the money I spend at the grocery store then goes to the burn-out stockboy, who then spends that money on weed. So my buying of groceries supports drugs.
You can't transfer the money that way. The original $50 supports the industry. The used $25 does not.
False. The comparison is fallacious. In the correct way of comparing my analysis, you need to consider what you want to buy when you buy it. You buy Radiant Silvergun used? You wanted a Treasure game and you bought it - you support Treasure. If the guy that sold you the game takes the money and buys Megaman you don't support Capcom (he does, that is his business and his taste for games not yours)! Similary you don't support a drug dealer if the guy that sold you Radiant Silvergun goes and buys drugs.
The correct comparison is rather, that when you buy groceries because you want groceries, so you support the makers of those groceries. So if you buy oranges you support the farmer of oranges, not the farmer of apples.
Would you say that it is the grocer supports the farmers? I wouldn't, but maybe you do. And yet the grocer is "buying the groceries" and selling them to you, so if transferring support that way can't be done...
The grocer (middle man) is like Gamestop, buying cheap and selling for more. They are not really supporting the respective industries, but rather having the respective industries support them as middle men (lets not get into the industry needing these middle men due to logistics).
Also Mr. Popo, I have a request for you: would you answer (for each case) who supports the industry in each case of this thread here:
http://www.racketboy.com/forum/viewtopi ... 44&t=37055
I want to track down where you think it breaks down. I think you would agree in case 1 that my brother would be the one supporting the industry for example, so I want to see at which step you disagree.
Ivo.