But kids are NOT being sold for 5000 dollars. Human traffickers can set much higher prices for children, so they are NOT selling them for 5000 dollars.
There a multitude of reasons for certain items on a website (selling tens-of-thousands of items) being listed incorrectly.
These reasons could include: incorrect imputation, setting an arbitrarily high price for an item that's out of stock.
There are sites like wayfair that may have been selling kids, but those prices made sense: $50,000, $100,000, etc.
But no one is going to risk smuggling kids for chump change like $5,000.
*Q stuff makes sense when you think about game theory, but this hypothesis is pure nonsense.
I don't know, therefore I won't pretend to know. However, the prices correspond to what a human trafficker would demand, so it's possible. Also, wayfair felt like a site that that kind of thing would happen, whereas Walmart or Target is not plausible, because they are already profitable corporations.
Human and child trafficking are 100% real, and I think the hypotheses expounded by Lin Wood are highly plausible. However, if I were you, I wouldn't worry about Walmart selling kids. (Although they are a shit company that should be boycotted)
My bad about the handshake.
But kids are NOT being sold for 5000 dollars. Human traffickers can set much higher prices for children, so they are NOT selling them for 5000 dollars.
There a multitude of reasons for certain items on a website (selling tens-of-thousands of items) being listed incorrectly. These reasons could include: incorrect imputation, setting an arbitrarily high price for an item that's out of stock.
There are sites like wayfair that may have been selling kids, but those prices made sense: $50,000, $100,000, etc.
But no one is going to risk smuggling kids for chump change like $5,000.
*Q stuff makes sense when you think about game theory, but this hypothesis is pure nonsense.
I don't know, therefore I won't pretend to know. However, the prices correspond to what a human trafficker would demand, so it's possible. Also, wayfair felt like a site that that kind of thing would happen, whereas Walmart or Target is not plausible, because they are already profitable corporations.
Human and child trafficking are 100% real, and I think the hypotheses expounded by Lin Wood are highly plausible. However, if I were you, I wouldn't worry about Walmart selling kids. (Although they are a shit company that should be boycotted)