Lol!!! like the gas in the tanks increased in value....
Hence, the opportunity for prospective customers to simply demonstrate the value of the product by not buying it.
Lol!!! like the gas in the tanks increased in value....
Why would a company ship items to a disaster area? I don't know... tax write offs? They seem to still do that.
If you mean why don't companies ship more products into a disaster area for the purpose of selling those items... it is probably because the demand drops off fairly quickly after the disaster has passed. Or because retail isn't usually the focus on disaster ravaged areas.
And there's nothing stopping them from shipping those items to home depot at normal retail prices and normal profit margins.
Your missing the point. It's against state law to jack the rates during a natural disaster. Any other time, make it $1k a night at Osh and someone will pay.
I was at a local event recently and Boy Scouts were selling cold water for double what they paid. It was hot, I was thirsty. If a state of emergency is declared and the boyscouts did the same thing, they could be prosecuted.
It's a law I completely agree with.
Regardless of what some of you think, the law is in place to protect people from those who have your ideologies. Don't try to sully the argument that your actions would be helping, and all the sudden you are now afraid of lawyers and courts. Thats total BS and you know it.
It's not capitalism, it's not "the way it's supposed to work" it's not the right thing to do and shame on you all for trying to act like taking advantage of people when they are in the worst of times is just A O.K.
The IMPRECISE "gouging" laws have a chilling effect on expensive relief efforts to bring things into an area that people should have purchased long before the event.
FTFY
It is not gouging laws themselves. It is gouging laws which allow definition after the fact of whether or not you've broken the law. If I am putting forth extraordinary effort to move a valuable commodity to an area of high need, I should be compensated with above average profit for making the effort. What I'm doing is desirable, bringing in things that are needed. Not at 200% profit, but how much is allowed? 5% is boring and I can probably get more than that staying at home. 10%? Yawn. 20%? Maybe. 50%? The more profit allowed, the more of a commodity will be made available because merchants will want to make money. But it should be defined by an exact amount.
Why not at 200% profit? Because some politician says so? I don't remember voting to protect lazy or disorganized people from their own lack of planning for weather events that have happened every single year since they've been alive. (I'd have a bit more heart on say, an earthquake in Nebraska. But this is standard eastern seaboard weather we're talking about here. It's not like anyone can claim they didn't know it was coming. Seems like society paid for these really expensive satellites and radars and stuff...)
Last month was the first time in 11 years that a hurricane made landfall in Florida. Not exactly an every year occurrence. And generally speaking, emergencies on a statewide scale far outstrip the resources available. It's easy to say "well I got mine so eff 'em" but turns out that hasn't been how societies have continued to exist for any length of time.
Any year one didn't threaten? Nope. I never said "I've got mine so eff 'em", at all. That's disingenuous BS.
As is the idea that societies don't exist without anti-gouging laws. Nanny-States don't exist without them, but that's a whole different level.
Two weeks of warning for a standard weather event seems like plenty of time to get your **** together. If not, you're probably traveling.
Do we need some nice government "I'm out of town" teams to go buy supplies and board up the house if someone is out of town, too?
But you give it away when you say "emergencies outstrip supply", of course they do. That's why you don't wait until a day before a storm to make your storm plan. Short supply chains fed from a long way away for capital goods isn't exactly anything new anywhere either. Nor reports on the TV that go national pointing out the inevitable has happened again and dolts are whining about it again. (Ever see anyone surprised by the news crew filming the same people standing in the gas line the day after? I certainly haven't.)
Even as a tourist to the area, I've seen the PSAs about being prepared for things. It's not like "society" hasn't warned folks over and over and over. Hell, your insurance deductible on the policy that renews once a year in the mail is a pretty good hint if you're a bit slow on the uptake, it sounds like.
The road signs are up around here telling folks to get freaking snow tires, again. Haven't seen a year in 44 of them that the signs haven't been up. And haven't seen a year where idiots aren't in the ditch due to bald tires. "Society" hasn't fixed it yet.
Got some nice fines you can pay now for causing accidents and logjams with your bald tires now, though. Probably money you should have spent on tires. Maybe government should set up a nice tire shop near the checkpoint and say, "You idiot. If you drive over there right now, and put proper tires on your vehicle we will waive the fine. If not, fine it is. Your call. Bring us back a receipt in an hour. We'll hold your credit card or cash until you come back." LOL.
I guess all those stupid Floridians should have had gas on hand and plywood stored in the bedrooms for the last 11 years, just in case.
Regardless of what some of you think, the law is in place to protect people from those who have your ideologies. Don't try to sully the argument that your actions would be helping, and all the sudden you are now afraid of lawyers and courts. Thats total BS and you know it.
It's not capitalism, it's not "the way it's supposed to work" it's not the right thing to do and shame on you all for trying to act like taking
advantage of people when they are in the worst of times is just A O.K.
The law doesn't protect anybody, you only perceive it to do so because you are suffering from the following errors of logic:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Appeal_to_emotion
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Confirmation_bias
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cognitive_dissonance
The laws hurt more than they help for a variety of reasons, such as:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deadweight_loss
"The most important single central fact about a free market is that no exchange takes place unless both parties benefit."
—Milton Friedman
I'm not suffering from anything other than compassion, logic and sound reasoning in society.
I'm not suffering from anything other than compassion, logic and sound reasoning in society.
But nice try.
"Capitalism is the astounding belief that the most wickedest of men will do the most wickedest of things for the greatest good of everyone." ~ John Maynard Keynes
...and the hell of it is, it's actually true.
Well to answer the original question I flew my bird from DAB to TLH, they didn't offer any special pricing on gas or tie downs just the regularly advertised prices so there was no price gauging at all. Prior to the storm where I live in Daytona I noticed no price gouging for fuel, water or anything else for that matter.
The FBO did mess up and accidentally topped off my airplane before I called for any fuel at all (you can imagine the initial panic when i got a phone call in the morning "hi justin this is xxxx from xxxx and there was a mishap", i was relived when she told me it was the fuel thing!), so they waived all the fees and offered me a very good discount on the fuel price for their mistake. Can't complain, I'll use the gas anyway at some point and it was even cheaper than fuel at home base for me!
It's a 182, right? Not like you had to worry about useful load. =D
Wrong. No way you could have educated yourself in 6 minutes; you obviously want to be ignorant.
The important thing is that when prices spike, people only buy what they need; it's too expensive to hoard, and that leaves more resources for everyone else.
I guess all those stupid Floridians should have had gas on hand and plywood stored in the bedrooms for the last 11 years, just in case.
Well to answer the original question I flew my bird from DAB to TLH, they didn't offer any special pricing on gas or tie downs just the regularly advertised prices so there was no price gauging at all. Prior to the storm where I live in Daytona I noticed no price gouging for fuel, water or anything else for that matter.
The FBO did mess up and accidentally topped off my airplane before I called for any fuel at all (you can imagine the initial panic when i got a phone call in the morning "hi justin this is xxxx from xxxx and there was a mishap", i was relived when she told me it was the fuel thing!), so they waived all the fees and offered me a very good discount on the fuel price for their mistake. Can't complain, I'll use the gas anyway at some point and it was even cheaper than fuel at home base for me!
If you live in Florida or coastal GA, SC, NC it is entirely reasonable to have these things at hand. Not necessarily plywood (which could rot) but a stack of aluminum 'hurricane panels' and boxes of fasteners to install them.