Quote:
Originally Posted by DuskyRose
I think any retailer can decide what they do and do not want to stock, but I don't believe that a payment company should have that same right. It shouldn't be up to them to decide what customer who do want to buy the items now can't. Obviously, if someone is using paypal to buy those items, then they want them. I don't think it's up to Paypal to decide that they can't have them by telling the retailer what they can and can't sell.
I'd also be pissed if I found that my Visa or Mastercard decided they could go into Books-A-Million or Barnes and Noble and tell them that they had to pull certain books and magazines or they could no longer use that form of payment.
I'm the consumer, and it's my right to decide what I want to buy with my money (even loaned money) and then I can decide whether I want to give a store my business based on what they sell. I don't agree that a third party can do that for me.
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No, it is not your right to decide what you buy with your monery.
That is my perogative and mine alone DuskyRose.
Just as you arbitrarily decided payment companies don't have the right to set standards their customers must meet, so I am over ruling your right to decide what to do with your money.
You will now turn over all of your money and I shall invest it for you entirely in a vintage Beanie Baby collection.
After all only certain people have rights and others don't.
Obviousely the sole detirminer of which is which must be me.