uniquebaseballcards
New member
- Nov 12, 2008
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Yes - looking in from the outside, Razor more or less acted like a prospector itself, with its target audience being other prospectors. I think some prospectors like to think they're the top link of the chain and can control or predict or correctly speculate any or all variables, but Razor is another instance that shows this isn't true.
HPC said:nyc3 said:huntah said:Anyone knows a forum where I can compain about a cereal box I bought? I tried to turn my purchase into profit, but haven't been able to. Die Frosted Flakes! Die!
Depends, did the company owner tell you the cereal would be worth money in 5 years with an attitude?
(Im not directing this at the OP, but in general)
This right here is a classic example of why prospectors lose money: they put too much faith into what someone says instead of doing the thinking for themselves
If I told you that I had a bridge in Phoenix to sell you, would you buy it without doing some research first? Same with buying a car. Do you walk into the car dealership and believe everything the salesman tells you?
I doubt it.
It's the blind leading the blind.
Now, that is not to say Razor didnt do shady things, but to blame them for your loss/unwise prospecting isnt fair.
People make promises all the time, and if Razor kept saying "we wont release any more like this, we promise", after the second time being let down, why did you keep buying? Didnt you see the writing on the wall with 2 previous examples? A company will do whatever is in it's best interests to make money and profit. If a sig series type brand sells well, why do you think they'd stop making it?
Once again, not condoning Razor's business practices but sometimes looking in the mirror is a tough pill to swallow.