Gee, it's almost like offering absolute shit service, making everything an additional fee, constantly canceling flights, and never being on-time is a poor business model. Who knew?
Part of it is that there's less hidden costs. I like it when it's just "the total is $30" instead of "there's $8 shipping and a $2 service fee and then $4 in taxes and..."
I've also seen some online stores lure in a customer with a really cheap initial price and then on the last page just slam them with insane shipping and handling fees hoping that the customer either doesn't notice or feels too invested at this point to cancel their purchase.
But yes, part of it is also people are stupid when they see the word "free" as if the store wouldn't move the cost somewhere else.
I dug down to get the audio. The girl is saying, "Bentley" in a seductive voice then tapping or rubbing various parts of the car. Donald says, "Citroën" in duck-speak and then does Donald Duck noises at times.
In the US, you can still get the stuff containing pseudoephedrine but you have to go to the pharmacy and ask for it and then show your ID. Out of curiosity, what's the process in Australia?
I said it was good they banned the ineffective ingredient so now they should do something about banning homeopathy. You said, "Ummm they did? That is what this banned, an advertised effective treatment that does nothing" but they did NOT ban homeopathy, just that one specific ingredient which had nothing to do with homeopathy. Now you're talking as if the first comment you said was something completely different.
So please, tell me what argument you're actually trying to make.
I've gotten into the habit of checking active ingredients after almost accidentally buying something homeopathic that was immediately adjacent the thing I actually meant to grab.
You dropped this: /s