Either do Democrats. We just like sensible anti-trust regulations. |
I'm pretty sure that both Democrats and Republicans are after the tech companies, but for totally different reasons. So nothing will be done. Tech companies win. Everyone else loses. |
Democrats aren’t socialists. Sorry. We like capitalism, when it’s regulated. |
Ebay doesn't have a monopoly. Plenty of options for buying and selling used goods online. Got any other ideas? |
I don’t have a problem with eBay. |
Me neither! If they want to stop selling Dr. Seuss books, that is fine with me. |
No you don't get it. You don't know me. You don't know what I read or don't read. You can't read my mind. You just think you do. So you end up talking to a fantasy you made up yourself. You are "reassuring" a person who doesn't exist. No idea why you think you have some kind of special insight into anonymous strangers, but I'm not a mind reader either. |
It's got a semi-monopoly, like other tech giants. Not control, but if the big guys don't carry it, it's harder to find. And socially, that's exactly what many people want, so Ebay is favoring the view that these books shojld be hard to find. |
I can’t read your mind, but I’m pretty good at reading letters and figuring out the subtext—something you apparently can’t do very well, or you wouldn’t be defending these books ![]() |
Ebay is not a tech giant. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_largest_technology_companies_by_revenue |
So Ebay doesn't have a monopoly. And most people don't want to buy the book. So what is the problem? That a small number of people want to buy the book and can't? There are lots of things that I want to buy that are no longer available for purchase. I wish I could buy a tee shirt like the Gap used to make in the early 2000s. And A particular work blouse that I loved, loved, loved and is no longer made or on Ebay. That isn't censorship. |
They lost the civil war They lost WW2 They lost at the Civil Rights Act and follow-on equality And yet, here we are, still catering to their 17th century sensibilities. |
DP...whether you know it or not, your words reflect the kind of person you are. |
I buy and sell specialty books on Ebay. Ebay and Amazon are the main markets for this. You can in fact find very old rare books on ebay, people do want them, and if you follow the market, you can figure out a good price easily. For many things, if it isn't on Ebay, it either doesn't exist at all, or the handful of people who might have it aren't selling. Or you've got to hunt specialty markets, like the pre-internet days. For people who want these things, like me, Ebay is the greatest thing in the world. What they allow or don't allow does effect me. People like me should have a voice in how society (through Ebay and other outlets) controls this corner of our lives. I don't see why that's such strange thing to want, even of I cab't have that right now. I really believe that some day we will have better answers that make everybody happier. I These sorts of controversies have happened before. We figured it out then. We'll figure it now. Free markets never really existed anyway. Always been controlled one or another, often informally. Free speech also has informal controls. Publisher controlling what they print based on social considerations of racism is a type of informal control, whether you recognize it or not. In fact, informal controls are often difficult to recognize and "subjective." But they are still a type of control if it's harder for me to get a book and even harder to talk about it. |
People glean who you are from the words you write, so you're either A) a terrible communicator, or B) exactly who the poster you're quoting says you are. |