from the outside looking in...
Sir...I see that you dont have many posts on this site. Allow me to school you a bit...you should not/can not comment negatively on a sellers asking price (unless its like 9 squillion dollars...lol). It's considered bad form, and is not fair to the seller, and/or potential buyer. Class dismissed.
Minding my business ? Lmao...we consider ourselves a large "family" on here. We look out for each other. Your NEW to this site. You basically have no SENIORITY here. Earn your respect. Learn some forum etiquette sir...or be singled out as a person with no "cooth" right from the get go. Your choice.
(if someone needs to reply to the comments below... please PM me as I don't want to highjack a FS thread)
Wow can we get any more arrogant? --
1. "Allow me to school you a bit ... Class dismissed" Family member or not, if talking to me, this person would be asked to go perform an act that many say is physically impossible.
2. This "Sir" thing at the beginning of a statement or at the end used as a replacement to an exclamation point, it appears, to me is akin to a drunk sticking his finger in your chest. You are polite at first but on the 3rd or 4th time you snap back the index finger or lay a bottle at the base of the skull.
3. Possibly the "cooth" thing would have been to send a PM as opposed to doing a post. It is like a older cousin, who you never see, trying to tell you how to do something in front of everyone at picnic .... again go perform that physically impossible act.
4. Seniority -- this is probably the word that got me to post. This AIN'T NO UNION SHOP -- the fact that someone got on AZ in 2005 or 2010 means nothing... I have read a lot of comments from people with several thousand posts who have achieved nothing other than to prove that they are in need of professional help.
5. Finally - I read the original comment as it was intended -- "pricey" >> expensive >>> like that Ferrari is beautiful BUT "pricey" so to get all " Allow me to school you .. and class dismissed" in a guy's face in a public place concerning a phrase that is commonly used is a little "uncooth" ... sir