Should Trump freeze prices to prevent coronavirus gouging?

Should Trump freeze prices to prevent gouging?

  • Yes

    Votes: 5 18.5%
  • No

    Votes: 21 77.8%
  • Not Sure

    Votes: 1 3.7%

  • Total voters
    27
Your logic prevents people of low and modest means from items they need when others are hogging and hoarding and prices are skyrocketing. Then there is also that empty shelf thingy...

Supply and demand ... I feel the pain but these folks should have thought of that two weeks ago ... and I think "need" goes to far ... is there food shortages, housing destroyed, clothing disintegrating ... the poor have what they need ... it's just luxuries that are in short supply ... you do know that anti-bacterial hand lotion doesn't kill viruses, right? ...
 
It has been done multiple times, WWII, Nixon, Carter. I do not know their reasoning, but I know it has never found to be unconstitutional

Yes, probably true at least in time of war. But, generally speaking, the concept of govt setting prices more accurately than the market is totally idiotic at best.
 
Freezing prices is a radical move only used (by mostly democrat administrations) in the worst of times . I'm surprised that mostly left wingers would give that authority to a republican administration during a relatively mild (so far) health issue.
 
any private business could and should.

It froze wages too.

and yet none of them took it to the SCOTUS...I wonder why?

You will have to ask them.

The question what was posed to you was "Where in the USC is the power granted to him to do this".

You can't answer it.

All you can point to is that it has been done in the past and not challenged. Somehow you equate that to "there must be something that says it".

But it does not.

No, what it equates to is that it does not matter if the words are in the USC or not. 90% of what our government does is not in the USC

That's quite an admission.

I am a realist. I call things as they are.
 
It froze wages too.

and yet none of them took it to the SCOTUS...I wonder why?

You will have to ask them.

The question what was posed to you was "Where in the USC is the power granted to him to do this".

You can't answer it.

All you can point to is that it has been done in the past and not challenged. Somehow you equate that to "there must be something that says it".

But it does not.

No, what it equates to is that it does not matter if the words are in the USC or not. 90% of what our government does is not in the USC

That's quite an admission.

I am a realist. I call things as they are.

So the term unconstitutional no longer has meaning to you ?
 
Freezing prices is a radical move only used (by mostly democrat administrations) in the worst of times . I'm surprised that mostly left wingers would give that authority to a republican administration during a relatively mild (so far) health issue.

That darn Dem Nixon! :21::21::21:
 
and yet none of them took it to the SCOTUS...I wonder why?

You will have to ask them.

The question what was posed to you was "Where in the USC is the power granted to him to do this".

You can't answer it.

All you can point to is that it has been done in the past and not challenged. Somehow you equate that to "there must be something that says it".

But it does not.

No, what it equates to is that it does not matter if the words are in the USC or not. 90% of what our government does is not in the USC

That's quite an admission.

I am a realist. I call things as they are.

So the term unconstitutional no longer has meaning to you ?

What has meaning to me is meaningless....

Where does the Constitution say that the Fed Govt can take my tax dollars and give them to farmers because of a stupid ass trade war?

Where does the Constitution say that Congress can abdicate its power to declare war and give it to the POTUS?

Where do you find the FISA court in the Constitution?
 
Your logic prevents people of low and modest means from items they need when others are hogging and hoarding and prices are skyrocketing. Then there is also that empty shelf thingy...

Supply and demand ... I feel the pain but these folks should have thought of that two weeks ago ... and I think "need" goes to far ... is there food shortages, housing destroyed, clothing disintegrating ... the poor have what they need ... it's just luxuries that are in short supply ... you do know that anti-bacterial hand lotion doesn't kill viruses, right? ...

Even poor people need food, medicine, and toilet paper. So do their children.
 
Consumers face coronavirus price-gouging

As fears over the coronavirus grow, people are frantically buying up supplies and leaving store shelves empty. Prices are also sky-rocketing online as demand grows, such as two large bottles of Purell hand sanitizer on sale for nearly $300 on Amazon. The same size normally sells for about $9 a bottle. An Amazon spokesperson says the company does not allow price gouging and it has "recently blocked or removed tens of thousands of offers." Anna Werner reports from a pharmacy in Manhattan on how coronavirus price gouging is affecting consumers.

How coronavirus price-gouging is hurting consumers

Have you experienced price gouging? I've heard several people say that they have. Since I don't do much shopping, I can't speak to any personal experiences - yet.
DJT is incompetent. That's why he put Pence in charge.
 
Price gouging is a traditional American patriotic response to alien invasions.
 
Consumers face coronavirus price-gouging

As fears over the coronavirus grow, people are frantically buying up supplies and leaving store shelves empty. Prices are also sky-rocketing online as demand grows, such as two large bottles of Purell hand sanitizer on sale for nearly $300 on Amazon. The same size normally sells for about $9 a bottle. An Amazon spokesperson says the company does not allow price gouging and it has "recently blocked or removed tens of thousands of offers." Anna Werner reports from a pharmacy in Manhattan on how coronavirus price gouging is affecting consumers.

How coronavirus price-gouging is hurting consumers

Have you experienced price gouging? I've heard several people say that they have. Since I don't do much shopping, I can't speak to any personal experiences - yet.

Here's the issue with price gauging. If you don't allow prices to fluctuate with the market, the result is there is no product.

When demand goes up, the cost goes up, which results in there being an incentive to bring products to market.

If you deny that system, then the result is there simply is not product.

I can think of dozens of examples of this.

After Hurricane Sandy, the mayor of New York sent out police to stop gas stations that were charging a higher price for gasoline.

The result after that, was that gas stations sold out of gas, and people simply.... didn't have any gas for their cars.

Before that, with higher prices, the gas stations were willing to pay gas suppliers a higher fee, to get gasoline shipped into the hurricane zone, which then allowed them to sell to customers, albeit at a higher price.

But with the government sending in police to shut down gas stations engaged in this, the result was no one was willing to pay a higher price for gas, so gas simply didn't show up, the gas stations ran out of gas, and everyone couldn't fill up their cars.

Similarly after Katrina, a hardware store owner contacted private trucking firms, to pick up gas generators, and truck them into the hurricane zone to his store. Of course doing that is horribly expensive, so the store owner sold the generators at a much higher price.... now interestingly, even at the higher price, he lost money on every generator sold.

Nevertheless, he was attacked and destroyed in the media for price gauging, and never had another generator trucked into New Orleans. He lamented that all the other hardware stores were not attacked for price gauging, even though all of them had no generators at all. And of course he closed his store, and provided no generators after that either.

Now as it relates specifically to this situation, I read a post from someone complaining about price gauging. They went to walmart or some other store, and found absolutely nothing. They went to a small independent shop, and found the shelves were full... but the prices were higher.

See, walmart and the other big stores, know that if they provide product at a higher price, that people will scream about gauging. And you know this is true.

So instead, when the product runs out... it just runs out. That's what you want. You'd rather have no product, than a product at higher price. So... no product.

The smaller shops are less likely to be mentioned on that national news, so they raise prices, which allows them to pay for more product, and thus they have product.

When you prevent product prices from adjusting, you result in Venezuela results. Price controls always.... ALWAYS result in shortage.

There's a reason why you can't even find coffee, in a country in the very center of a coffee bean growing region. Price controls.

So whether it is price controls on gas or power generators in a hurricane zone, or price controls on food in Venezuela, or if you control the price of hand sanitizer in the name of "price gouging", the result will always be shortages.
 
Consumers face coronavirus price-gouging

As fears over the coronavirus grow, people are frantically buying up supplies and leaving store shelves empty. Prices are also sky-rocketing online as demand grows, such as two large bottles of Purell hand sanitizer on sale for nearly $300 on Amazon. The same size normally sells for about $9 a bottle. An Amazon spokesperson says the company does not allow price gouging and it has "recently blocked or removed tens of thousands of offers." Anna Werner reports from a pharmacy in Manhattan on how coronavirus price gouging is affecting consumers.

How coronavirus price-gouging is hurting consumers

Have you experienced price gouging? I've heard several people say that they have. Since I don't do much shopping, I can't speak to any personal experiences - yet.

Here's the issue with price gauging. If you don't allow prices to fluctuate with the market, the result is there is no product.

When demand goes up, the cost goes up, which results in there being an incentive to bring products to market.

If you deny that system, then the result is there simply is not product.

I can think of dozens of examples of this. After Hurricane Sandy, the mayor of New York sent out police to stop gas stations that were charging a higher price for gasoline.

The result after that, was that gas stations sold out of gas, and people simply.... didn't have any gas for their cars.

Before that, with higher prices, the gas stations were willing to pay gas suppliers a higher fee, to get gasoline shipped into the hurricane zone, which then allowed them to sell to customers, albeit at a higher price.

But with the government sending in police to shut down gas stations engaged in this, the result was no one was willing to pay a higher price for gas, so gas simply didn't show up, the gas stations ran out of gas, and everyone couldn't fill up their cars.

Similarly after Katrina, a hardware store owner contacted private trucking firms, to pick up gas generators, and truck them into the hurricane zone to his store. Of course doing that is horribly expensive, so the store owner sold the generators at a much higher price.... now interestingly, even at the higher price, he lost money on every generator sold.

Nevertheless, he was attacked and destroyed in the media for price gauging, and never had another generator trucked into New Orleans. He lamented that all the other hardware stores were not attacked for price gauging, even though all of them had no generators at all. And of course he closed his store, and provided no generators after that either.

Now as it relates specifically to this situation, I read a post from someone complaining about price gauging. They went to walmart or some other store, and found absolutely nothing. They went to a small independent shop, and found the shelves were full... but the prices were higher.

See, walmart and the other big stores, know that if they provide product at a higher price, that people will scream about gauging. And you know this is true.

So instead, when the product runs out... it just runs out. That's what you want. You'd rather have no product, than a product at higher price. So... no product.

The smaller shops are less likely to be mentioned on that national news, so they raise prices, which allows them to pay for more product, and thus they have product.

When you prevent product prices from adjusting, you result in Venezuela results. Price controls always.... ALWAYS result in shortage.

There's a reason why you can't even find coffee, in a country in the very center of a coffee bean growing region. Price controls.

So whether it is price controls on gas or power generators in a hurricane zone, or price controls on food in Venezuela, or if you control the price of hand sanitizer in the name of "price gouging", the result will always be shortages.

This is a definite crisis where socialism should override capitalism!
 
Consumers face coronavirus price-gouging

As fears over the coronavirus grow, people are frantically buying up supplies and leaving store shelves empty. Prices are also sky-rocketing online as demand grows, such as two large bottles of Purell hand sanitizer on sale for nearly $300 on Amazon. The same size normally sells for about $9 a bottle. An Amazon spokesperson says the company does not allow price gouging and it has "recently blocked or removed tens of thousands of offers." Anna Werner reports from a pharmacy in Manhattan on how coronavirus price gouging is affecting consumers.

How coronavirus price-gouging is hurting consumers

Have you experienced price gouging? I've heard several people say that they have. Since I don't do much shopping, I can't speak to any personal experiences - yet.

Here's the issue with price gauging. If you don't allow prices to fluctuate with the market, the result is there is no product.

When demand goes up, the cost goes up, which results in there being an incentive to bring products to market.

If you deny that system, then the result is there simply is not product.

I can think of dozens of examples of this. After Hurricane Sandy, the mayor of New York sent out police to stop gas stations that were charging a higher price for gasoline.

The result after that, was that gas stations sold out of gas, and people simply.... didn't have any gas for their cars.

Before that, with higher prices, the gas stations were willing to pay gas suppliers a higher fee, to get gasoline shipped into the hurricane zone, which then allowed them to sell to customers, albeit at a higher price.

But with the government sending in police to shut down gas stations engaged in this, the result was no one was willing to pay a higher price for gas, so gas simply didn't show up, the gas stations ran out of gas, and everyone couldn't fill up their cars.

Similarly after Katrina, a hardware store owner contacted private trucking firms, to pick up gas generators, and truck them into the hurricane zone to his store. Of course doing that is horribly expensive, so the store owner sold the generators at a much higher price.... now interestingly, even at the higher price, he lost money on every generator sold.

Nevertheless, he was attacked and destroyed in the media for price gauging, and never had another generator trucked into New Orleans. He lamented that all the other hardware stores were not attacked for price gauging, even though all of them had no generators at all. And of course he closed his store, and provided no generators after that either.

Now as it relates specifically to this situation, I read a post from someone complaining about price gauging. They went to walmart or some other store, and found absolutely nothing. They went to a small independent shop, and found the shelves were full... but the prices were higher.

See, walmart and the other big stores, know that if they provide product at a higher price, that people will scream about gauging. And you know this is true.

So instead, when the product runs out... it just runs out. That's what you want. You'd rather have no product, than a product at higher price. So... no product.

The smaller shops are less likely to be mentioned on that national news, so they raise prices, which allows them to pay for more product, and thus they have product.

When you prevent product prices from adjusting, you result in Venezuela results. Price controls always.... ALWAYS result in shortage.

There's a reason why you can't even find coffee, in a country in the very center of a coffee bean growing region. Price controls.

So whether it is price controls on gas or power generators in a hurricane zone, or price controls on food in Venezuela, or if you control the price of hand sanitizer in the name of "price gouging", the result will always be shortages.

This is a definite crisis where socialism should override capitalism!

Well that didn't work for Venezuela did it?

People don't work for free, no matter if there is a government politicians making back room deals, or if there is a capitalist involved.

If you think companies are going to provide hand sanitizer without making a profit, you are crazy.

Now if you want, you can have government pay for hand sanitizer, but then the companies will make even greater profits.

We've seen that in Venezuela. The companies that signed contracts with the Venezuelan government, have made incredible profits, while people are still starving.

So if you want the rich and wealthy to get even larger amounts of your money, just from taxes instead of you paying for it directly...... that's fine I guess... but I don't want to hear you complaining that the rich get richer, while the poor get poorer, when you are directly advocating that outcome.
 
Consumers face coronavirus price-gouging

As fears over the coronavirus grow, people are frantically buying up supplies and leaving store shelves empty. Prices are also sky-rocketing online as demand grows, such as two large bottles of Purell hand sanitizer on sale for nearly $300 on Amazon. The same size normally sells for about $9 a bottle. An Amazon spokesperson says the company does not allow price gouging and it has "recently blocked or removed tens of thousands of offers." Anna Werner reports from a pharmacy in Manhattan on how coronavirus price gouging is affecting consumers.

How coronavirus price-gouging is hurting consumers

Have you experienced price gouging? I've heard several people say that they have. Since I don't do much shopping, I can't speak to any personal experiences - yet.

Here's the issue with price gauging. If you don't allow prices to fluctuate with the market, the result is there is no product.

When demand goes up, the cost goes up, which results in there being an incentive to bring products to market.

If you deny that system, then the result is there simply is not product.

I can think of dozens of examples of this. After Hurricane Sandy, the mayor of New York sent out police to stop gas stations that were charging a higher price for gasoline.

The result after that, was that gas stations sold out of gas, and people simply.... didn't have any gas for their cars.

Before that, with higher prices, the gas stations were willing to pay gas suppliers a higher fee, to get gasoline shipped into the hurricane zone, which then allowed them to sell to customers, albeit at a higher price.

But with the government sending in police to shut down gas stations engaged in this, the result was no one was willing to pay a higher price for gas, so gas simply didn't show up, the gas stations ran out of gas, and everyone couldn't fill up their cars.

Similarly after Katrina, a hardware store owner contacted private trucking firms, to pick up gas generators, and truck them into the hurricane zone to his store. Of course doing that is horribly expensive, so the store owner sold the generators at a much higher price.... now interestingly, even at the higher price, he lost money on every generator sold.

Nevertheless, he was attacked and destroyed in the media for price gauging, and never had another generator trucked into New Orleans. He lamented that all the other hardware stores were not attacked for price gauging, even though all of them had no generators at all. And of course he closed his store, and provided no generators after that either.

Now as it relates specifically to this situation, I read a post from someone complaining about price gauging. They went to walmart or some other store, and found absolutely nothing. They went to a small independent shop, and found the shelves were full... but the prices were higher.

See, walmart and the other big stores, know that if they provide product at a higher price, that people will scream about gauging. And you know this is true.

So instead, when the product runs out... it just runs out. That's what you want. You'd rather have no product, than a product at higher price. So... no product.

The smaller shops are less likely to be mentioned on that national news, so they raise prices, which allows them to pay for more product, and thus they have product.

When you prevent product prices from adjusting, you result in Venezuela results. Price controls always.... ALWAYS result in shortage.

There's a reason why you can't even find coffee, in a country in the very center of a coffee bean growing region. Price controls.

So whether it is price controls on gas or power generators in a hurricane zone, or price controls on food in Venezuela, or if you control the price of hand sanitizer in the name of "price gouging", the result will always be shortages.

This is a definite crisis where socialism should override capitalism!

uhhhh....Not just no, but hell no.
 
Consumers face coronavirus price-gouging

As fears over the coronavirus grow, people are frantically buying up supplies and leaving store shelves empty. Prices are also sky-rocketing online as demand grows, such as two large bottles of Purell hand sanitizer on sale for nearly $300 on Amazon. The same size normally sells for about $9 a bottle. An Amazon spokesperson says the company does not allow price gouging and it has "recently blocked or removed tens of thousands of offers." Anna Werner reports from a pharmacy in Manhattan on how coronavirus price gouging is affecting consumers.

How coronavirus price-gouging is hurting consumers

Have you experienced price gouging? I've heard several people say that they have. Since I don't do much shopping, I can't speak to any personal experiences - yet.

Here's the issue with price gauging. If you don't allow prices to fluctuate with the market, the result is there is no product.

When demand goes up, the cost goes up, which results in there being an incentive to bring products to market.

If you deny that system, then the result is there simply is not product.

I can think of dozens of examples of this. After Hurricane Sandy, the mayor of New York sent out police to stop gas stations that were charging a higher price for gasoline.

The result after that, was that gas stations sold out of gas, and people simply.... didn't have any gas for their cars.

Before that, with higher prices, the gas stations were willing to pay gas suppliers a higher fee, to get gasoline shipped into the hurricane zone, which then allowed them to sell to customers, albeit at a higher price.

But with the government sending in police to shut down gas stations engaged in this, the result was no one was willing to pay a higher price for gas, so gas simply didn't show up, the gas stations ran out of gas, and everyone couldn't fill up their cars.

Similarly after Katrina, a hardware store owner contacted private trucking firms, to pick up gas generators, and truck them into the hurricane zone to his store. Of course doing that is horribly expensive, so the store owner sold the generators at a much higher price.... now interestingly, even at the higher price, he lost money on every generator sold.

Nevertheless, he was attacked and destroyed in the media for price gauging, and never had another generator trucked into New Orleans. He lamented that all the other hardware stores were not attacked for price gauging, even though all of them had no generators at all. And of course he closed his store, and provided no generators after that either.

Now as it relates specifically to this situation, I read a post from someone complaining about price gauging. They went to walmart or some other store, and found absolutely nothing. They went to a small independent shop, and found the shelves were full... but the prices were higher.

See, walmart and the other big stores, know that if they provide product at a higher price, that people will scream about gauging. And you know this is true.

So instead, when the product runs out... it just runs out. That's what you want. You'd rather have no product, than a product at higher price. So... no product.

The smaller shops are less likely to be mentioned on that national news, so they raise prices, which allows them to pay for more product, and thus they have product.

When you prevent product prices from adjusting, you result in Venezuela results. Price controls always.... ALWAYS result in shortage.

There's a reason why you can't even find coffee, in a country in the very center of a coffee bean growing region. Price controls.

So whether it is price controls on gas or power generators in a hurricane zone, or price controls on food in Venezuela, or if you control the price of hand sanitizer in the name of "price gouging", the result will always be shortages.

This is a definite crisis where socialism should override capitalism!
I have 10 cartons left of Trump toilet paper $5 a roll
 
You will have to ask them.

The question what was posed to you was "Where in the USC is the power granted to him to do this".

You can't answer it.

All you can point to is that it has been done in the past and not challenged. Somehow you equate that to "there must be something that says it".

But it does not.

No, what it equates to is that it does not matter if the words are in the USC or not. 90% of what our government does is not in the USC

That's quite an admission.

I am a realist. I call things as they are.

So the term unconstitutional no longer has meaning to you ?

What has meaning to me is meaningless....

Where does the Constitution say that the Fed Govt can take my tax dollars and give them to farmers because of a stupid ass trade war?

Where does the Constitution say that Congress can abdicate its power to declare war and give it to the POTUS?

Where do you find the FISA court in the Constitution?

This is a different debate.
 
Consumers face coronavirus price-gouging

As fears over the coronavirus grow, people are frantically buying up supplies and leaving store shelves empty. Prices are also sky-rocketing online as demand grows, such as two large bottles of Purell hand sanitizer on sale for nearly $300 on Amazon. The same size normally sells for about $9 a bottle. An Amazon spokesperson says the company does not allow price gouging and it has "recently blocked or removed tens of thousands of offers." Anna Werner reports from a pharmacy in Manhattan on how coronavirus price gouging is affecting consumers.

How coronavirus price-gouging is hurting consumers

Have you experienced price gouging? I've heard several people say that they have. Since I don't do much shopping, I can't speak to any personal experiences - yet.
You are asking Trump, the one you hate so much to help out ??? Unbelievable. LOL.

Sort of like an atheist faced with his dying breath saying "Lord please help me".
 
No, what it equates to is that it does not matter if the words are in the USC or not. 90% of what our government does is not in the USC

That's quite an admission.

I am a realist. I call things as they are.

So the term unconstitutional no longer has meaning to you ?

What has meaning to me is meaningless....

Where does the Constitution say that the Fed Govt can take my tax dollars and give them to farmers because of a stupid ass trade war?

Where does the Constitution say that Congress can abdicate its power to declare war and give it to the POTUS?

Where do you find the FISA court in the Constitution?

This is a different debate.

It is all the same debate....none of it is in the Constitution, just like the power of price controls.
 
That's quite an admission.

I am a realist. I call things as they are.

So the term unconstitutional no longer has meaning to you ?

What has meaning to me is meaningless....

Where does the Constitution say that the Fed Govt can take my tax dollars and give them to farmers because of a stupid ass trade war?

Where does the Constitution say that Congress can abdicate its power to declare war and give it to the POTUS?

Where do you find the FISA court in the Constitution?

This is a different debate.

It is all the same debate....none of it is in the Constitution, just like the power of price controls.

So....

If you admit it is not in the constitution.

Then it makes you wonder what the constitutiion is good for.

I live for the day the fucking federal government is just a building on the corner where two small streets intersect.

In the meantime, as far as I am concerned it isn't his job and I don't want hi doing it.
 
Consumers face coronavirus price-gouging

As fears over the coronavirus grow, people are frantically buying up supplies and leaving store shelves empty. Prices are also sky-rocketing online as demand grows, such as two large bottles of Purell hand sanitizer on sale for nearly $300 on Amazon. The same size normally sells for about $9 a bottle. An Amazon spokesperson says the company does not allow price gouging and it has "recently blocked or removed tens of thousands of offers." Anna Werner reports from a pharmacy in Manhattan on how coronavirus price gouging is affecting consumers.

How coronavirus price-gouging is hurting consumers

Have you experienced price gouging? I've heard several people say that they have. Since I don't do much shopping, I can't speak to any personal experiences - yet.

Here's the issue with price gauging. If you don't allow prices to fluctuate with the market, the result is there is no product.

When demand goes up, the cost goes up, which results in there being an incentive to bring products to market.

If you deny that system, then the result is there simply is not product.

I can think of dozens of examples of this. After Hurricane Sandy, the mayor of New York sent out police to stop gas stations that were charging a higher price for gasoline.

The result after that, was that gas stations sold out of gas, and people simply.... didn't have any gas for their cars.

Before that, with higher prices, the gas stations were willing to pay gas suppliers a higher fee, to get gasoline shipped into the hurricane zone, which then allowed them to sell to customers, albeit at a higher price.

But with the government sending in police to shut down gas stations engaged in this, the result was no one was willing to pay a higher price for gas, so gas simply didn't show up, the gas stations ran out of gas, and everyone couldn't fill up their cars.

Similarly after Katrina, a hardware store owner contacted private trucking firms, to pick up gas generators, and truck them into the hurricane zone to his store. Of course doing that is horribly expensive, so the store owner sold the generators at a much higher price.... now interestingly, even at the higher price, he lost money on every generator sold.

Nevertheless, he was attacked and destroyed in the media for price gauging, and never had another generator trucked into New Orleans. He lamented that all the other hardware stores were not attacked for price gauging, even though all of them had no generators at all. And of course he closed his store, and provided no generators after that either.

Now as it relates specifically to this situation, I read a post from someone complaining about price gauging. They went to walmart or some other store, and found absolutely nothing. They went to a small independent shop, and found the shelves were full... but the prices were higher.

See, walmart and the other big stores, know that if they provide product at a higher price, that people will scream about gauging. And you know this is true.

So instead, when the product runs out... it just runs out. That's what you want. You'd rather have no product, than a product at higher price. So... no product.

The smaller shops are less likely to be mentioned on that national news, so they raise prices, which allows them to pay for more product, and thus they have product.

When you prevent product prices from adjusting, you result in Venezuela results. Price controls always.... ALWAYS result in shortage.

There's a reason why you can't even find coffee, in a country in the very center of a coffee bean growing region. Price controls.

So whether it is price controls on gas or power generators in a hurricane zone, or price controls on food in Venezuela, or if you control the price of hand sanitizer in the name of "price gouging", the result will always be shortages.

This is a definite crisis where socialism should override capitalism!
I have 10 cartons left of Trump toilet paper $5 a roll
You might sell it to those still crying after 2016. Hope you find more of it, because they definitely gonna need it again. Heck you'll be rich.
 

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