I'm happy Jim is being reasonable about the whole thing.
I have a parable for the pro-advertising people and the ones running this site in general.
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Joe loves making hotdogs. But more than he loves making hotdogs is he loves it when people eat the hotdogs he makes. So he saves up some money and sets up a hotdog stand and gives away his hotdogs for the joy of seeing people eat them. And people love his free hotdogs and he loves watching them be eaten.
Unfortunately Joe has to keep working his day job to support his hotdog hobby. And he can't cook and give away as many hotdogs as he wants on his limited income. So he instead of giving away hotdogs for free he tries to sell them for enough to recoup his costs and make a living wage. Sadly not enough people are willing to pay what the hotdogs cost and to support Joe and he can't sustain his business.
Along comes Adam with a proposition for Joe. Adam will pay Joe to give away his hotdogs for free, but the catch is that Adam gets to put a tiny insect in each one. Now Adam isn't just a dick who gets joy out of seeing people eat bugs (even though he is a dick). Adam actually gets paid significantly more than he pays Joe by other, shadier people for each bug he gets someone to eat.
Joe reluctantly agrees because Joe isn't really that creative and can't think of any other way to support himself giving away free hotdogs. He still gets the joy of cooking hotdogs, and only feels a little bad for putting a bug in each one, since the vast majority of people don't seem to care as long as the hotdog is free. Oh sure a few people complain loudly and publicly but with the money Joe is earning he can afford to hire security guards to shoo away anyone who even talks about the bugs near his cart.
And for a while things are going fine. But eventually other hotdog philanthropists spring up, because apparently a lot of people would love to make a living cooking and giving away free hotdogs. And now that Adam has a hotdog vendors competing for his dollar, he can make them put in bigger, grosser, and more obvious bugs. Some of the hotdog vendors feel really bad about putting big bugs in their hotdogs (some don't care at all), but again they can't think of any other way to make money so they keep doing it.
Eventually Joe has a revelation. Maybe Adam's money isn't worth the bad feelings he gets for feeding people bugs. He decides to quit. Then he gets back his non-hotdog related day job and occasionally, for fun, sets up a stand to give away a few bug-free hotdogs every once in a while, and though Joe can't produce as many hotdogs as before he is happier for it.
The end.
I have a parable for the pro-advertising people and the ones running this site in general.
------
Joe loves making hotdogs. But more than he loves making hotdogs is he loves it when people eat the hotdogs he makes. So he saves up some money and sets up a hotdog stand and gives away his hotdogs for the joy of seeing people eat them. And people love his free hotdogs and he loves watching them be eaten.
Unfortunately Joe has to keep working his day job to support his hotdog hobby. And he can't cook and give away as many hotdogs as he wants on his limited income. So he instead of giving away hotdogs for free he tries to sell them for enough to recoup his costs and make a living wage. Sadly not enough people are willing to pay what the hotdogs cost and to support Joe and he can't sustain his business.
Along comes Adam with a proposition for Joe. Adam will pay Joe to give away his hotdogs for free, but the catch is that Adam gets to put a tiny insect in each one. Now Adam isn't just a dick who gets joy out of seeing people eat bugs (even though he is a dick). Adam actually gets paid significantly more than he pays Joe by other, shadier people for each bug he gets someone to eat.
Joe reluctantly agrees because Joe isn't really that creative and can't think of any other way to support himself giving away free hotdogs. He still gets the joy of cooking hotdogs, and only feels a little bad for putting a bug in each one, since the vast majority of people don't seem to care as long as the hotdog is free. Oh sure a few people complain loudly and publicly but with the money Joe is earning he can afford to hire security guards to shoo away anyone who even talks about the bugs near his cart.
And for a while things are going fine. But eventually other hotdog philanthropists spring up, because apparently a lot of people would love to make a living cooking and giving away free hotdogs. And now that Adam has a hotdog vendors competing for his dollar, he can make them put in bigger, grosser, and more obvious bugs. Some of the hotdog vendors feel really bad about putting big bugs in their hotdogs (some don't care at all), but again they can't think of any other way to make money so they keep doing it.
Eventually Joe has a revelation. Maybe Adam's money isn't worth the bad feelings he gets for feeding people bugs. He decides to quit. Then he gets back his non-hotdog related day job and occasionally, for fun, sets up a stand to give away a few bug-free hotdogs every once in a while, and though Joe can't produce as many hotdogs as before he is happier for it.
The end.