| | Steve, to answer your question...
Not necessarily, although the people that operate under those kinds of weak techniques certainly welcome incoming data. What they do with it is another matter. The technique they are considering is not unorthodox, it revolves around opportunism gone wrong. It does not allow for the creation of business relationships. That kind of thinking is short-term. Where it comes from does not make any matter, although usually it involves some philosophical flaw. It is cut and burn thinking. It is nomadic, it rejects the concept of having a need for ongoing fair trade in general. That kind of thing catches up to people, long term.
Bruce Lee defined luck this way: "Luck is when preparation meets opportunity."
True enough. The question is what is living in back of the preparation, and I believe that is a moral question, if you are looking at how you fit into everything.
Gouging is a technique, it is an old one. There are many old negotiating and business practices. The good ones flourish over the long haul, the bad ones die out. What that does not preclude is the constant reemergence of the bad ones. Again, that is why capitalism is so beautiful- in the end, it usually will take care of that, with no moralizing, no blame- it just eliminates, eventually, usually. It is nearly perfect.
Gouging is a willful practice, it means thinking that you can get something off that you normally couldn't over the long haul.
The current model we are talking about involves gas prices, and that is a bad one in that there is considerable political and economic complexity in play. But, behavior is behavior, and I trust capitalism. I also trust that people will remember. If you are in city "A" and there is one guy "gouging" (I know, it doesn't exist), meaning he sticks way out of the crowd, without any apparent reason, in the end, this is not going to be good for him. He was being greedy. Greed is irrational, because it involves thinking that you are entitled to something that, in the end, you are not.
(Edited by Rich Engle on 9/06, 11:58am)
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