Quote:
Originally Posted by Sliver
Yeah, I know his family was freezing, so he needed to buy some space heaters. You don't get to steal time with space heaters when you get cold. You pay for them.
You're not getting how it works, though. It's not Canadian Tire who will eat this loss. It's their supplier. And yeah, it's not spelled SuPpLiEr. Suppliers are actual business run and owned by actual people. If you need a heater borrow one from a friend (free) or buy one.
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Isn't jroc an actual person too? I get what you're saying, but if we're worried about food on the table, the dude already has to pay for a new furnace, which is way above the cost any individual person on the supply side is going to feel for Canadian Tire accepting returned product within the return window.
How is it different than anything else? How is it different than deciding "oh, actually I don't like this, so I'm going to return it because I can."
I bought a new phone and didn't like the colour, so I returned it and got a different one. They're not going to re-sell it as new, so they'll take a loss on it while I walk away just fine. Was I supposed to keep it for moral reasons?