Fortunately, the conditions of "hungry" and "thief" are not mutually exclusive.Hungry.
Fortunately, the conditions of "hungry" and "thief" are not mutually exclusive.Hungry.
And this definition of 'thief' is outrageously off-kilter.Fortunately, the conditions of "hungry" and "thief" are not mutually exclusive.
Would you care to explain that or would doing so break forum rules for making things personal?Now you sound like a Magic player.
I not once said it is a crime, in fact I said the opposite in a reply to one of your posts recently... not sure why you keep insisting on repeating the same stuff over and over, when it is clear (or at least should be) that this is not what I am saying, at all"Possession of a mislabeled purchase" isn't a crime. You seem to want this to be wrong, but can't define what the actual problem is.
I got news for you, I do not care about WotC either. Yes, that guy still is an idiot for what he did and I still see nothing wrong with what happened to him.If this were a corporation you didn't have any feelings for, one way or another, say a sneaker company that only sells shoes in Australia, do you think you'd be this sure the customer who got a pair of Platypus 2k3s a month early, when he'd purchased a pair of Koala Hightops, was the bad guy?
I mean, yes? Essentially. They can justify it all they like, and most people will give them a pass... but it's a pretty simple calculation: Did they take something that wasn't theirs? Yes.So everyone who gets the wrong Doordash and just eats it rater than deal with the horrendous chat support is a thief?
A thief is someone who takes (or consumes) something that is not legally theirs. How is that off-kilter?And this definition of 'thief' is outrageously off-kilter.
at a minimum he does not own the product, because he never bought it
pretty sure the law would agree howeverAnd this definition of 'thief' is outrageously off-kilter.
Something they were given in exchange for legal tender.I mean, yes? Essentially. They can justify it all they like, and most people will give them a pass... but it's a pretty simple calculation: Did they take something that wasn't theirs? Yes.
Well, that wraps this up pretty nicely then.The FTC disagrees with you. If he bought them from a retailer, then he bought them. If he was shipped them in error, then he still owns them.
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What To Do if You’re Billed for Things You Never Got, or You Get Unordered Products
Billed for products you never ordered, or for products you ordered but never got? Federal laws protect you. Here's what to do.consumer.ftc.gov
Notably, these rules exist in order to prevent "I ship you something you didn't order, then bill you" scams, but they apply anyway.
Inventory and shipping errors are the problem of the shipper, not the receiver, in basically all cases.