originally posted by Jonathan Loesberg:
originally posted by VLM:
There are two things I'm curious about. One philosophical, one practical.
Is anyone who kept buying from PC when they were warned/should have known that the business model was fraudulent and received wines ethically on the hook to those who didn't? I guess it's complicated, but everyone I know ITB has known for at least a decade that PC wasn't in the securing wine business. Sure, they got some great stuff back when it was easy to arbitrage wine prices, but for a long time they'd just float prices and take years to deliver because they never had the wines. I don't know that this was a Ponzi scheme exactly, but they were definitely filing orders with new money to old money. People were warned and didn't care because they "got their wines". But did they, really? Didn't they just get others wines, etc?
The practical question is about fakes. Given where and how they were sourcing wines, I've always believed that there were a lot of fake wines tucked in there. People would talk about how wines "looked perfect" and "were cold to the touch" (one of my faves) with spinning capsules. If I were sitting on a lot of high end PC wines, I'd be nervous. Also, there is no idea about unbroken chains of custody and I definitely had heat damaged bottles back in the day.
Anyway, not going to wade into the berserkers morass since I am semi-ITB and have a devious agenda.
You are making a basic error, which is that you are assuming that because you knew x to be true, so must everybody else and so if they didn't act that way, they must have had some ulterior motive. I think a lot of people, I for one, just disagreed with you. The question of whether I ought to have is separable from the question of whether I did.
To be fair, I didn't know the way I know the square root of 9. There wasn't "concrete evidence". It was accepted fact at least in circles that I ran in and the information was out there for anyone.
My point is about more than people acting in nefarious ways but rather if willful disbelief has it's own ethical ramifications. "I'm getting such good deals and they've always delivered my wines."
Further, at some level or another, in an obvious flatfooted way, people who did get their wine (virtually all of them for a lot of years, after all) were getting the wines they paid for. The fact that PC's mode of doing business didn't entail (or in some cases didn't entail) using the money in the way they contracted PC to use it does not mean that they were engaged in PC's fraud.
I'm not so sure, I think it raises some thorny questions that are interesting to think about. If deals are too good to be true, does that mean that someone is getting hurt somewhere? How do we apportion blame for things like that?
I have nothing to say about the second question.
Using the same type of thought process that leads to suspecting a "Ponzi-like" scheme, it seems that there must be more fakes in the PC channel than in traditional channels.