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Esteemed Contributor
Posts: 6,431
Registered: ‎07-10-2011

@RespectLife wrote:

@matty liz wrote:

Degrees do not denote smart people.  Compassion, integrity, knowing who you are and caring who others are denote brilliance.  My son was classified as a genius when still in Kindergarden and what I taught him is, it was a gift, hard to handle sometimes but not something that made him better than others.

 

 

 

 

 


I'm sorry @matty liz 

 

I don't see what this has to do with the topic of this thread which is returns?????


@RespectLife  I was wondering if @matty liz  Posted on the wrong Thread.

Honored Contributor
Posts: 13,789
Registered: ‎03-09-2010

@Puppy Lips wrote:

Well here is another perspective from a SELLER on Amazon.

 

We sell some items that are likely purchased by teenage males.  I can not tell you how many times this has happened -- the customer gets the product, opens it up, takes a few pieces (cards) out that he wants, then claims it was defective and returns it to us.

 

This just happened again last week.  So now, not only do we have something we cannot sell because it was opened, we have something that is incomplete.  Now we have to take the time to argue with Amazon (always an overseas CS person) and plead our case.  Sometimes we win, sometimes we don't and Amazon refunds the customer's money.

 

Just another example of the low moral standards that are so prevalent today.

 

Great customer service for the customer.

 

LOSE LOSE LOSE for the seller.

 

And by the way, when outside companies sell on Amazon, Amazon takes a cut of like 20%.


 

It's horrible that people take advantage like that. Doing that never even occurred to me and I thank my parents for bringing me up right and even myself for having higher standards.

 

If you sell on another's portal/website, expect to pay for it. That's business.