(07-26-2017, 06:52 PM)Slyfox Wrote: Price gouging isn't just of needed stuff like food or water. If say a company continues to make product A, but during panic buying people buy lots of it, but they keep trucking along making it, so it's not going run out and the panic will pass. Meanwhile store A jacks the price to 5 times normal for product A to take advantage of the panic. Say tomorrow some politician wants to ban the import of foreign shave stuff, but it never happens cause others won't back it. But people being people rush out and buy any foreign shave soap they can. If a store started charging $100 for a tub of prorasso, that'd be price gouging. To me price gouging is simple to see, if the manufacturer prices the item at $20 and a store sells it for a lot higher then it's probably price gouging l exceptions for stuff brought in from overseas with shipping and import fees. As a gun guy I still remember the days of $20 mags going for $120 despite the manufacturer saying not to. I hope such days never come to shaving.
If you choose to pay higher than reasonable prices, you have made a choice, you have not been gouged. If you choose to participate in the Black Friday chaos of ultra-premium prices and unobtainium "toys", you have CHOSEN to be a part of that...you have not been gouged.
If you are in the desert, dying of dehydration, and a man walks by with a case of bottled water and sells you a bottle for $50, you have been gouged.
If you are in the desert dying of dehydration, and a man walks by with a tank of tepid, yet potable, water and a hose for $1, or a bottle of ice cold water for $50, and you CHOOSE to spend $50 on the bottled water...you have not been gouged.
At the end of the day, if you CHOOSE to spend premium prices on a premium product, there is no gouging. Make no mistake about it, everything that we discuss here is a choice, from the soaps and blades, to the methods and techniques.
Quote:Also I disagree shave stuff is a luxury item. It's in the same category of toilet paper and deodorant. Lots of people have to shave it's not an option. So I guess if it's a luxury item would depend on the person. To someone like me or you with 30+ soaps I suppose buying another soap is a luxury. To that guy or lady who uses one soap it's not a luxury item. It might be the soap that works for them. I for example could never use canned stuff.
The products and methods we use are ALL optional. They are ALL luxury items, because they are not necessary to accomplish the task of shaving. You might PREFER these products and techniques, but preference does not equal necessity. You CAN get a clean, close, and comfortable shave from foam in a can, and a disposable. $3 out the door. If you CHOOSE to spend $50 on a soap, $200 on a brush, and $400 for a Wolfman...you have not been gouged, you have have made a choice.
Just because I enjoy an artisan soap, a vintage straight, and a badger brush does not mean that I cannot shave my head without those items. I can. I may not ENJOY it as much, but I CAN accomplish the task.