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You could turn that around and say that since people would not be allowed to freely resell foreign made goods but still be able to resell American made goods then that would be a boom for American made products because who would purchase items they could not resell. I think if this is upheld it would make U.S. manufactured products much more attractive.
Markets and student bookstores-- this reminds me of a statement I made in Tea With an Occupy Student, a thread from last year:
"...the public university he attended, in cahoots with the student book store, had artificially created the environment for being able to charge outrageous fees for books that the citizens of that university (students) either had to pay, or risk failure in their classes. This explained why the two books he had to buy at the book store cost more than twice the amount he had to pay elsewhere for his six other books.
The free market forces consisting of stores that rent out text books for a price cheaper than buying even a used copy, stores that buy and then sell used texts, internet services that connect those wanting to ditch a text with those with a need for them, students willing to barter texts, etc. If the campus' politics allowed less of a monopoly for the campus' bookstore by giving them nonpreferential treatment, then the market forces would provide a more reasonable price for every student.
Critics of the free market are quick to malign the dreaded profit motive but it works beautifully here. The intention of organizers of alternatives to the campus bookstore is irrelevant. The market forces and competition among all the stores benefits the students.
As a result the campus bookstore finds that it can only charge so much before students will go elsewhere. In other words, there is a ceiling placed on their prices by competition with the other bookstores.
Imagine how much books would cost in the absence of any competitor to the campus bookstore. There would be virtually no limit to how much they could charge. And people think text books are expensive now!"
I would rather see the real problem here tackled by the Supreme Court, which is the totally anti-capitalistic methods used to hyperinflate college textbooks, which this poor foreign student used to his advantage in making his obscene profits.
Good points X. I'm sure colleges and universities are in cahoots with publishers and bookstores and I'm sure they get a kick back from book sales. With this current Supreme Court everything is a toss up. Who knows how they will rule after the Obamacare fiasco. This is going to be very interesting.
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