Except there are many who don't think that way. They just follow the herd and buy what's popular. So it's not matter of buying a clapped out rc 98 becuae they want to collect German or ww2 guns, it's buying it because everyone is buying one, so it must be the one to buy.
Now you're splitting hairs again.
Your arguments have become personal prefference related.
The reality of the matter is that MOST, not al people can't afford to collect firearms of any sort. On top of that the vast majority of people who do have milsurps only have them because they like to shoot and there was, up until recently, a lot of cheap surplus ammunition available for those firearms.
Ex Soviet Block nations dumped their inventories of SKS/Mosin variants and other similar firearms at below cost of manufacture prices.
A good example of how awry that reasoning can go is with the recent import of Carcano Carbines. Ammunition is very hard to find and components for reloading the spent cases is even more difficult to find.
This is exactly what happened when the plethora of Swede Mausers were dumped in North America back in the mid seventies. Ammunition, even though it was being manufactured in Canada by Dominion was next to impossible to find and the price of the all matching number rifles languished in the $20 range for most models, other than the M94 Carbines. Many of them were cut down and rebarreled for sporter/hunting rifles in chamberings that were easily come by.
Only a very small percentage of firearms enthusiasts were even interested in those rifles at the time, other than as curiosities.
When the surplus 303 Brit dried up, prices on the rifles actually came down for a few years, but commercial production kept the sporters shooting and the Canadian government kept the costs down by procuring ammunition for the Ranger rifles.
Collecting fine milsurps, is done by a very small fraction of Canadian firearms enthusiasts.
This is mostly because the average firearms enthusiast can't justify the cost of purchasing or shooting them. It's even difficult to display them anymore, so why be bothered with this heavy old firearm gathering dust in the closet or stored in the back of the safe??
I don't mind the mismatched, beaten, ridden hard milsurps out there. It keeps interest up and in the case of my collectibles, the valuations higher.
The milsurps we see today are what's left. They may not be pretty and numbers may not match, but that's how they were designed and built to be. They were designed to be able to mix parts and keep on functioning under severe conditions, for long periods of time in a safe/effective manner and they do this job very well, just as they were intended to do.