Office Supply Hucksters Demand That You Get a Life

  • +4
    Resident47
    | 2 replies
    Here's what happens when you let shills have free run of a thread for 2.5 years. Looks like the same illiterate creep has been rebutting complaints against an apparent office supply fraud shop. Pull his string for one of four fun taunts: "Please pay your bills", "We'll stop calling when you pay your bill", "Your name is on the pens you ordered so you need to pay", and the ever-helpful advice to "get a life". There's also a "wounded bird" post about how unfair the complaints are to a swell businessman.

    I've already requested a red stamp party from Admin, but thought I would summarize the site rule violations here in case mass deletion is warranted.

    https://800notes.com/Phone.aspx/1-954-968-3277/2
  • +4
    MidNYteStorm replies to Resident47
    Considering the similarity of many comments I have noticed since I have been active, I cannot help to wonder if they actually use a script when commenting. It really would not surprise me.
    Having said that, I also can see somebody with too much time on their hands doing the same thing. Maybe their Atari 2600 broke and they have nothing else to do.
  • +3
    Chewbacca-the-Wookie
    That wouldn't surprise me.  Scripts seem to be the only way they can get anything done.  :-)
  • +3
    Julia replies to Resident47
    Thanks, Res! I cleaned it up a bit.
  • +3
    Chewbacca-the-Wookie
    | 2 replies
    "A private business has the right to charge whatever they please for their products."

    Yeah!  Ask any meth dealer.
  • 0
    Sharpshooter replies to Chewbacca-the-Wookie
    | 1 reply
    He's right, actually.

    A business CAN change any price they want; that doesn't mean they'll get it.

    Who do you think DOES set the price?
  • +3
    BigA replies to Sharpshooter
    Legally they cannot change the price after the contract for sale has been made unless there is mutual agreement.  Now if you were referring to charging prices, then yes a business owner can charge any price he wants, but that is limited to what the customers will pay.  This is all worked out in a complex system that would require me to spend too much time and way too much space to explain it.  The problem here is not what they are charging for the pens or whatever they are selling, but the methods they are using to sell them.  They are calling companies up claiming that they ordered pens when nothing was ordered and then convincing someone in purchasing to accept those pens.  This is called deceit and fraud.  That is the real issue here which the other poster tried to deflect either because he was too ignorant to understand the problem, or because he works for the company and didn't want the truth to come out.

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