For those of you following
my blog (either directly or via
the Livejournal feed), you'll already know that I posted
a followup to t
he letter I posted last week due to being sent a cease & desist letter from a lawyer representing the store.
If you don't, you're welcome to follow along.
Comments 6
"Being the older brother to five sisters I've always tried to be considerate of womens feelings and sensitivities."
To me it smacks of "let's humor the women because they don't have a valid complaint but it's easier to hush them up than actually address what they say."
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I totally understand the impulse to protect the local shop. The internet has been rough on a lot of local businesses - it's hard to compete on price. The way local yarn shops can compete is in tactile time-with-yarn (I can walk away from internet yarn pretty easily, but if I've held it, I'm easily hooked), community-building, and face-to-face customer service. And those are actually the reasons for wanting to protect them - I want yarn around I can touch in a space where I can ask questions, get advice, and enjoy time with friends.
But to be worthy of protecting, you have to actually furnish those benefits. I want a well-stocked yarn store local to me, but not one that treats people with disrespect. No amount of tactile time-with-yarn is worth that.
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It sucks.
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