Age Verification
This website contains age-restricted material including nudity and explicit content. By entering, you confirm being at least 18 years old or the age of majority in the jurisdiction you are accessing the website from.
I am 18+ or older - Enter
I am under 18 - Exit
Our parental controls page explains how you can easily block access to this site.

Last posts - Page 1100

  Forum

Zossima
Joined in Feb 2008
615 post(s)

TGIF and the good time for a spring break game

Everything about iStripper
March 14, 2019, 303 answers
@dar2112v - it is you that are ***** opinions with facts. ANY price that Totem offer a card at is fair, whether it be 1 credit, 100 credits or 10000000000 credits as long as we are free to choose whether to buy or not. I do not think $100 is a reasonable price, I think it is a very expensive price to pay but that has no effect on whether it is a fair price or not.

That is utter and total nonsense. According to your definition of fairness, usury is fair, because hey, nobody points a gun to any borrower's head. This modern-day capitalistic view of things is saddening, but it looks perfectly aligned with your policy of always defending poor Totem against its vile ***** clients, who should be content with anything that's offered to them at any price and under any circumstances.

Your facts are tainted by your personal worldview. There is such a thing as a fair price: it's a price that brings satisfaction without ***** to both parties.

A low price can be unfair (as in low cost businesses), because for example it lowers employees' wages on the company side while suppressing quality of service (and services themselves) on the client side.

A high price can be fair, because it appeals to affluent clients whose worldview gets validated in the process (I spend big money on things, it strengthens my social status), independently of whether the product/service is worth the price.

In the matter at hand, 1,000,000 credits for a card would be neither fair nor unfair, simply stupid. A thousand credits for a card would be fair only to affluent clients who don't care about money because they have plenty of it, while it would be very unfair to other people who: a- can't really afford such a high price; b- are ***** to a niche product they can't find elsewhere.

There is such a thing as an unfair price, especially when it is the result of a gambling game that at no point clarifies the odds, as ought to be done.