That's all fine and dandy but it doesn't explain things like gasoline prices being the way they are, or software costing what it does. Capitalism was never designed to be about vapourware supply and demand characteristics like software, where you can simply control the competition with venture capital and charge whatever you want. Gasoline companies make a killing simply because the world can't function without energy, they just price it cheap enough so that we have to use it.
Capitalism was about 2 bakeries in a town competing for muffin business, this transnationalism was never even dreamed of at a time when electricity didn't exist.
What these gun retailers do in Canada is try to get as much profit as possible, and I don't have a problem with that, my issue is the fact that they whine all damn day and make people believe they're somehow being trodden upon. It's not an essential service they're providing, people choose to pay the prices because they enjoy the hobby or want people to think they do. I'm just pointing out how absurd it is when people cheerlead for retailers that are making stupid money and then run to their defense when they treat a customer like trash and get away with it.
First off, true capitalism does NOT exist in our society. The government killed off the last remnants of it decades ago by going to a pure fiat based monetary system, long before I was born. The system we live in now is straddles the line between state capitalism and national socialism - and the aberrations that exist in all our markets today are entirely a function of decades of government and central bank intervention, regulation, and manipulation.
Venture capital making hostile takeovers of competitors is a good example of a SYMPTOM of the problems with this system, but it's not the root cause. Simply put, a system where government encourages banks to make unlimited securitized loans, it gives both the banks and those who know how to game the system the ability to accumulate unimaginable power. It is true that corporations run the world - but they only do so because governments shelter them from natural market conditions that would otherwise obliterate them. Just look at what the "Conservatives" are doing in power now - bailouts, stimulus, an "Economic Action Plan" for failing industries.
Furthermore, you say "we have to use it," in describing gasoline. That's patently false - rather, the vast majority of people have made choices to make it such that they are entirely dependent upon it being below a certain price threshold. Of course - they've been steered towards making these choices again because the government has created incentives and manipulated the economy to be that way. Of course, the government makes sure it benefits off such the dependency they've created, as well. Gas is a terrific example of this - the average tax on gasoline nation wide is 32%, as much as the oil companies make - don't forget, the government get's a VERY healthy cut of the pie as well.
I'm not saying some gun retailers are unethical, immoral, or unprofessional. Gun retailers are typically corporations and corporations themselves are government approved person-hoods managed by actual people. As such, corporations can be either good or bad. The thing is, gun retailers have to jump through a LOT of hoops just to start up a business and once they are in business, they have to keep jumping through a lot of hoops just to stay in business.
A good example is the Calgary Shooting Centre - they wanted to start up a range and business and had to take out a million dollar loan, and then it took them almost a year and a half to open their doors to generate ANY revenue. There's a lot of factors that contribute to that - not the least of which is compliance with government regulations. Once in business, they have enormous operational expenses no other retail business has - specialized insurance, specialized equipment, OH&S, environmental, much more enhanced security, qualified staff requirements (staff must have a PAL), safe storage requirements, very expensive importation permits, not to mention a highly unpredictable supply chain of inventory - just to name a few.
Add to that at any point the CFO can come in and do an inspection and essentially shut them down for any reason they want or that the government can (and does) make all kinds of hair-brained regulation that makes it virtually impossible to make any long term forecasts for doing business. Just look at the Alberta CFO's ruling that all guns must be locked at gun shows. Imagine if the CFO made a ruling (as they most certainly could) every gun on display for business MUST have the action removed - that alone would be an ENORMOUS cost to retail businesses.
So back to the Calgary Shooting Centre example. You think about the 3 owners of that range - they have hundreds of thousands of dollars on the line, have to endure essentially years of no revenue, no income, with ZERO guarantee of success - yet they do it anyways. Now think that EVERY firearms related business essentially has to go through the same process. Now imagine the Government comes in and bans all semi-automatics - half of those businesses would fold within a few months.
The long and short of it is even if I have preferred vendors, I have HUGE respect for the guys who run firearms businesses. I once thought the way you did, until I did some research and tried to start my own one up. I was of the philosophy "if I don't like it, I'll just start my own darn business." After finding out what's involved, I'm just happy there are as many businesses as there are - because honestly, there's MUCH easier ways to make a living in this country. People who run gun based retail or distribution businesses are either insane or they do it as a labor of love.
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Oh yeah, I called up my cousin in Edmonton, and he went to 3 Walmarts in the North West side of town - same deal - no Win555's in any of them. Only the more expensive CCI's in stock. Not sure of other calibers.