Griz
Driving the short bus....
As I said earlier, this is interesting. Your motives may genuinely be purely altruistic and if so, then who can fault you for sincerely wanting to help others? However, as has been pointed out, your actions are not without problems.
Do NOT make the assumption that the vast majority of people who earn above average incomes work less than those who earn lower incomes. When most of my friends, who still earn lower then average incomes, were out partying when they were younger, I was going to school full-time and working full-time. It was that dedication that allowed me to earn the income that I have now. And, as a business owner, I guarantee you that I work just as hard, if not harder then your average worker. What I earn, what I own, is due solely to my hard work and not the gift of others.
Secondly, you mention in your earlier posts that you are doing this so that the individuals earning a lower than average income can make a 10-20 times return on their investments. While the thought, in theory at least, might be noble it is also very poor advice. Not many people can reap that kind of return let alone if their incomes are at levels that prohibit them from paying normal retail prices of said animals. Truly, the only person here that is benefiting is you with the increase in sales. The advice that they need to hear is the value in a 401K, or in using flex credits through their employer, or even life insurance. To advise individuals who are having a hard time making ends meet to invest in animals vs making sure they have life insurance, is poor advice to say the least.
Again, assuming your intentions are noble, I understand what you are doing although I disagree with it. To think that my years of hard work and labor to get where I am today is now being met with a "your price for xyz animal is twice what Joe Schmoe on welfare is" is rather hard to swallow regardless of your intent.
David, this is simply one man's opinion and the other side of the coin. Regardless, I wish you well on your endeavors and hopefully future one's will be a bit better thought out.
Griz
highendherps said:I also feel that this opportunity enables the less privileged, whom often work MUCH harder to make a living than the upper classes, to make some lucrative investments that can make them 10 to 20-fold their investment in less than 3 years and thus they can then have a better, more rewarding life.
Do NOT make the assumption that the vast majority of people who earn above average incomes work less than those who earn lower incomes. When most of my friends, who still earn lower then average incomes, were out partying when they were younger, I was going to school full-time and working full-time. It was that dedication that allowed me to earn the income that I have now. And, as a business owner, I guarantee you that I work just as hard, if not harder then your average worker. What I earn, what I own, is due solely to my hard work and not the gift of others.
Secondly, you mention in your earlier posts that you are doing this so that the individuals earning a lower than average income can make a 10-20 times return on their investments. While the thought, in theory at least, might be noble it is also very poor advice. Not many people can reap that kind of return let alone if their incomes are at levels that prohibit them from paying normal retail prices of said animals. Truly, the only person here that is benefiting is you with the increase in sales. The advice that they need to hear is the value in a 401K, or in using flex credits through their employer, or even life insurance. To advise individuals who are having a hard time making ends meet to invest in animals vs making sure they have life insurance, is poor advice to say the least.
Again, assuming your intentions are noble, I understand what you are doing although I disagree with it. To think that my years of hard work and labor to get where I am today is now being met with a "your price for xyz animal is twice what Joe Schmoe on welfare is" is rather hard to swallow regardless of your intent.
David, this is simply one man's opinion and the other side of the coin. Regardless, I wish you well on your endeavors and hopefully future one's will be a bit better thought out.
Griz



