• nutsack@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    1 day ago

    moderation like this is pretty stupid. why not just let people go nuts in a thread? it’s contained to a fucking thread. That’s the whole point of The construct of a thread.

    • Gladaed@feddit.org
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      1 day ago

      If it gets racist or vile you still need to shut it down. This is a topic poised to become racial stereotypes told by majorities about minorities. You usually don’t verify the origin of the claimants.

      E.g. those Turks and their bazaars trying to scam each other of the last penny, or something antisemitic.

      I might have erred on the side of caution as well.

      • Skullgrid@lemmy.world
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        1 day ago

        or something antisemitic.

        awful

        those Turks and their bazaars trying to scam each other of the last penny,

        Speaing as a turk, accurate.

        • shawn1122@lemm.ee
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          22 hours ago

          Sounds like capitalism working as intended to me.

          A Big Mac is a bigger scam than anything sold in a market by ordinary people.

            • shawn1122@lemm.ee
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              22 hours ago

              I was hoping this would be the Turkish equivalent of two paper thin patties, three buns, some lettuce and thousand island dressing for $7 USD but yeah I can see how haggling the price of soap can be frustrating too.

              • Skullgrid@lemmy.world
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                21 hours ago

                nah.

                Açık sabun is basically when some dude at a market sells liquid soap, of which an industrial container has been opened and repackaged in smaller bottles for home use after being watered down and becoming unhygenic.

                hence,

                those Turks and their bazaars trying to scam each other of the last penny,

                is unfortunately all too true.

      • nutsack@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        1 day ago

        i moved from the united states to a country which has a pretty intense haggle culture. without being able to talk about it, you might come here and think you’re just being scammed by everyone.

        • Where are you now if you don’t mind? I absolutely hate haggling. I’ve read that in Persian society if you don’t haggle three times you are being rude. I’m not trying to be racist, and I may have remembered wrong, but this sounds like hell to me.

          • Orangutanion@lemmy.worldOP
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            17 hours ago

            See, THIS kind of discussion is what I asked for. Good intentions and just trying to figure out the POV of the other culture. This hyper-puritanical moderation prevented this good discussion from taking place where it belongs.

          • nutsack@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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            1 day ago

            yeah. as an American, I think haggle culture is annoying as hell. it’s completely unnecessary. they’ll tell you the price is really high, and then you’ll ask for something really low, and then they’ll meet you in the middle where the price is supposed to be. what the hell was the point?

            it’s partly an ego thing. if you’re selling something, and you don’t give them at least some inconsequential discount, they’re going to feel like they got ripped off. even if you’re giving them an honest price that they won’t find anywhere else, they need to buy it at a price that’s lower than what is offered. The buyer and seller both need to feel that they are smart because they moved the price from what the other person wanted.

            selling your motorbike or camera gear on Facebook is absolute hell. 90% of the messages you get will be wasting your time. “hello, I would like to buy your motorcycle for $40”. haggle spam, basically. oftentimes they will agree to some price and then actually show up to your place, stare at the bike for an hour, and then change their bid to something so low that it is not sensible.

            I could list examples for hours.

            • shawn1122@lemm.ee
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              22 hours ago

              I mean this is just a cultural difference. Of course as an American, where haggling is uncommon and not a part of societal norms, you will find it annoying.

              In other countries, where retail sectors are not as standardized, haggling is seen as a form of social interaction and networking. It is, by all means, less efficient. But not every culture romanticizes productivity to the point of working / chasing a bag until you’re frail, incontinent and need to be put in a ‘home’.

              The lack of efficiency is also antithetical to consumerism which is a cultural norm in many parts of the world where haggling is uncommon. You can buy 15 pieces of junk on Amazon in the amount of time it takes to haggle one peice of junk at a market. Which is more ‘normal’ depends on which part of the world you’re from.

              Haggling in person is a completely different experience from online. You can fake your identity online, disappear randomly, and spam for the sake of spamming. It’s much harder to do that when you show up with your real face in a relatively close knit community.

              Not in any way trying to dismiss your experience. I find it very uncomfortable as well but having South asian parents means that I’ve seen my fair share of such transactions and how they can have the interesting effect of bringing people together.

              • nutsack@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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                20 hours ago

                yea, the key to doing business offline here is to make friends. the service quality and prices you get are entirely dependent on it. i usually enjoy this aspect of the culture more than i am annoyed by it, but it depends on what I’m trying to get done. what you are saying is accurate of my experiences as well.

            • Guh. All that sucks. I have some friends who were born in India, and they have told me the worst thing about being from that culture while living in the US is random Indians asking them to do things or give them a discount or even free stuff. Not all Indians do this of course, but it’s enough to complain about.

              • nutsack@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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                22 hours ago

                yeah, I’m sure that being an Indian immigrant gives you access to a business community. probably nice for finding clients and partners, etc. the business culture within that community would be some mix of American and Indian.

        • Gladaed@feddit.org
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          1 day ago

          Not my point. I just presented an argument for closing the thread. There is a valid conversation to be had, but having it is difficult.

          • nutsack@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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            1 day ago

            it sounds like from op’s drawing here that it was a discussion which was working. if the threaded Reddit style paradigm isn’t the right format for this type of discussion, I don’t know what is

            • Gladaed@feddit.org
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              1 day ago

              The issue is not the thread format, but the community they asked in and the generality and phrasing of the question. If you were to ask about a specific region and try to ask in a space where people who live there are willing to answer it would be much easier to moderate.

              • Orangutanion@lemmy.worldOP
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                17 hours ago

                My issue with this is that barter and haggling is a very diverse practice that is seen differently across the world. All cultures do it in certain forms and in certain contexts, but both those concepts and how haggling is performed/perceived differ wildly. This in my opinion is a very solid question for general anthropology. Before the thread got removed, I was getting answers about all kinds of places, not just the Middle East.

                One really good comment in that thread that is now removed mentioned that, when they went to Thailand, the merchants had a system where they would hand you a calculator with the price punched in and you would change that price and hand it back. They said that they entered in decimals that don’t exist in Thai currency as a joke, and that the merchant seemed entertained. I don’t think that I can get these kinds of answers from mass-posting on subs of a bunch of different countries–I wasn’t even thinking of Thailand when I wrote the original post.

      • Orangutanion@lemmy.worldOP
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        17 hours ago

        Why punish me for this though? Nothing in the original thread was racist and I asked it in the way I thought would best avoid racist answers. The answers on the thread before it was taken down weren’t racist either.

    • shawn1122@lemm.ee
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      22 hours ago

      Going nuts in a reddit thread quickly becomes Black and brown people bad, white people good

      A lot of people are sick in the head over there.

  • paranoid@lemmy.world
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    1 day ago

    It would be kind of funny if, in protest, mods set automod to remove every post for inciting violence

    • Orangutanion@lemmy.worldOP
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      16 hours ago

      Here you go. All I wanted to know about was haggling in other cultures from their point of view.

      Actually, I’m gonna go ahead and delete the reddit post. Here is the title and body of it for preservation purposes:

      Are there any cultures where either today or historically it was considered rude NOT to haggle?

      Like in the scene from Life of Brian, where he goes to buy something from a street vender, and when he pays the initial asking price the vender gets upsets and forces him to haggle. Does this happen in real life? I suppose in a culture where haggling is normal, if a vender intentionally sets a high initial price and then the person just pays it, they could feel like they were given too much money for the item. But money is money, you know?