[meteorite-list] Fwd: How many meteorite dealers are there?
From: Michael L Blood <mlblood_at_meteoritecentral.com>
Date: Wed, 09 Jul 2008 23:19:29 -0700 Message-ID: <C49AF801.1805F%mlblood_at_cox.net> Hi Norbert and all, In terms of the survey I conducted a few years ago with list Members, whether or not someone was a "meteorite dealer" Was left up to them - and there were a LOT of people who Reported themselves as meteorite dealers. I, personally, would consider having a meteorite web site Or a meteorite mailing list to be minimal as qualifying as a Meteorite dealer. Selling your upgraded collection pieces on Ebay occasionally would not cut it - however, if you sell meteorites On eBay on an ongoing basis, week after week, that would definitely Constitute a "dealer" and is exactly what Dean Bessey did for a very Long time before having a web site. HOWEVER, again, this topic (what constitutes a meteorite dealer) Can be found in the list archives and was discussed for days involving Many dozens if not hundreds of posts on the question. Best wishes, Michael on 7/9/08 4:54 PM, Norbert Classen at riffraff at timewarp.de wrote: > Hi Alex, and All, > > A very good question, and I believe there's an answer to that. But let's > start by asking some more questions: > > If you sell a T-shirt or a pair of Jeans on eBay from time to time, does > this make you a commercial dealer, or even part of the textil > business/industry? If you sell a used book once in a while, does this make > you a book seller? Surely not. > > If you have a registered business for selling meteorites (or minerals) you > might consider yourself a commercial seller (dealer), if you don't you are > probably no "dealer", but just a private person/collector who sells a > rock/meteorite sample once in a while. So, do you have a commercial eBay > account, or a private account? It's that simple. > > I don't know for other countries, but in Germany there's a clear distinction > (set by the tax authorities): if you are making a profit with it you have a > business and you are considered to be a "H?ndler" (commercial seller). If > you are spending more on a hobby than you earn with your related sales you > are considered a "Liebhaber" (hobbyist), and they won't even tax your > related income because you are making zero profit with your once in a while > sales. > > So I guess some people need to re-consider the real meaning of the word > "dealer" in a social and economical context. If we are talking of commercial > sellers, and people who make a real profit by selling meteorites there are > probaly not as many "meteorite dealers" as you might think. > > Just my two cents, > Norbert > > -----Urspr?ngliche Nachricht----- > >> Can you tell the MeteoriteMan is a dealer or the collector is the >> MeteoriteMan? Is there a borderline? > > Exactly this is what I called into question! :-) Any suggestions for a > definition of "dealer"? > > Alex > Berlin/Germany > > ...who thinks there are more than those mentioned "dealers" on that list, > but then again, where is the borderline, in terms of, may be, common sense > and understanding? So any thoughts and ideas are welcome here.... > Going to church doesn't make you a Christian any more than standing in a garage makes you a car. Received on Thu 10 Jul 2008 02:19:29 AM PDT |
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