I realize that you like to counter my posts with stuff you just pull out of your azz
What, exactly, did I "pull out of my azz?" Use quotes.
Never once did I ever state I haggle my prices. Fact is: I do not budge on them.
Then your attempt to counter my post with one about how if you had a dollar for every time someone haggled your prices with you you'd be rich, was actually pointless. Instead, it supports MY contention that here in the US, it's NOT normal, NOT "generally considered just the first offer at the start of a haggling ritual", the way overread framed it, and DOESN'T generally get people HERE in the US anywhere, so it's not very common for people to even TRY it.
No, not everyone goes into a grocery store and starts in with the cashier about the price of milk.
"Not everyone"???!!! Who are you trying to kid? Not ANYONE, unless they're interested in wasting their own time, and everyone else's time with them, from the cashier to the people in line behind them.
But haggling does get initiated, mostly with service-based industries.
Re-read my post. I didn't say "never", so don't try to use that as an intended part of what you're trying to counter, because it doesn't exist. What I specifically said was, "in the US, the price marked is
almost always the price expected by the vendor." I carved out situations like yard sales, real estate and car sales as common ones where negotiations do play a significant role. One can assume they are not the only ones where that would apply.
Those exceptions do not detract from the fact that they do not constitute the lion's share of transactions that take place in the US, the vast bulk of which do not involve haggling or even the attempt at haggling, counter to overread's assertions on what a price represents, and your attempts to bolster that assertion, even though you now tell us that you never budge on your price when someone tries to haggle with you.
But hey, if assuming you know how everyone else acts in the real world works for you, go ahead and continue assuming things. No skin off my nose. But until you're the one sitting on the side of the desk with the drawers, you'll be speaking through your hat.
So, you're saying that the reactions in the videos are BS? That those kinds of reactions are NOT normal? That those kinds of reactions are unexpected? That haggling in the US is a common thing? Good luck with that.
I don't have to "assume" anything at all, when it's quite obvious from living 56+ years in this country and dealing with the realities of vendors, goods, services, prices and haggling or attempts at it - from both sides of the desk - how that all works together here.
It's WHY the videos are relevant - because they show the TRUTH of the situation as it NORMALLY is in the US.
Yes, there are exceptions - they are not the rule, they are not common, they are not the norm. Not in the US, they're not.
Overread said that "we must all remember" that a given price is just the start of the haggling phase. No, in the US we DON'T "must all remember" such a thing, because here in the US, that's not true, and that's what I was addressing.
Overread concluded by saying that the videos just showed failed haggling. Again, not in the US, they don't. In the US, they show the REALITY of how such attempts at haggling are NORMALLY perceived.
That's not pulled out of my AZZ in any way.