• @[email protected]
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    85 months ago

    While not as basic a necessity as housing, live music is also an extremely important thing to many people.

    Just saying “don’t buy it” is kind of shitty and enables the predatory practices of the likes of Ticketmaster/Livenation…

      • @[email protected]
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        15 months ago

        Yeah. Not to mention that a lot of people’s social identity, social activities and sense of community are all tied up in going to concerts together…

    • @[email protected]
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      435 months ago

      I’d bet if you were a lego fan you’d say the same about legos.

      Housing and concerts are orders of magnitude apart in “importantness”. All of the items above are not needed to live. A home is needed.

      • PropaGandalf
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        45 months ago

        Define a “home”. A cave? A tent? A huge loft? What is really necessary to survive?

          • @[email protected]
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            35 months ago

            I’d add a place where you won’t get attacked or threatened while sleeping, and maybe where you can store your stuff that also won’t get stolen easily

          • @[email protected]
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            15 months ago

            That’s a good classification to have.

            The apartment I lived in until June this year was my or my friends home for 20 years, but I stayed sick after the new neighbors moved in and started destroying the place. I couldn’t have food anymore because of the rodents, roaches, bedbugs and diseased water that started running down the walls and leaking through the ceiling.

      • MrScottyTay
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        95 months ago

        People who buy Lego to sell in the future actually do call it investing by the way

        • Yeather
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          25 months ago

          It’s scalping if you have a quick turn around, it’s investing if you take care if it to sell farther into the future. Seeing a recently released limited set for double the price on ebay is scalping, seeing a 20-30 year old mint set for double the price is investing.

          • @[email protected]
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            15 months ago

            If it’s a limited edition and someone buying it to “invest” denies another person’s ability to purchase and enjoy it then fuck the “investor”.

            If enough are available at the time that anyone who wants it can acquire it then I have no problem with someone keeping a copy in good condition to sell later.

      • @[email protected]
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        25 months ago

        Housing and concerts are orders of magnitude apart in “importantness”. All of the items above are not needed to live. A home is needed.

        Which I conceded in the very first sentence. Seems like neither you nor the people downvoting paid enough attention to catch that, though.

        Blaming customers and scalpers for a problem caused mainly by Ticketmaster can be a bad thing without it being anywhere near as important as housing or anywhere near as bad as inflating the price of same. It’s not a binary.

    • @[email protected]
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      155 months ago

      I agree that “just don’t buy it” is not that easy for culture in general, it could be applied to hypermonetized events.

      I’m not sure I get your second point. How is Ticketmaster enabled by people boycotting events that get scalped?

      • @[email protected]
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        35 months ago

        How is Ticketmaster enabled by people boycotting events that get scalped?

        They aren’t by that specifically, but they are by transferring the blame to scalpers and the victims of both scalpers and Ticketmaster…