Is it immoral to make a profit on a spare ticket if your buddy has had to cancel on you and can't make the Wembley trip?
Is it immoral to make a profit on a spare ticket if your buddy has had to cancel on you and can't make the Wembley trip?
I cant help that mate, simple question, this is bound to occurr in some quarters
Is it immoral to make a profit on a spare ticket if your buddy has had to cancel on you and can't make the Wembley trip?
Is it immoral to make a profit on a spare ticket if your buddy has had to cancel on you and can't make the Wembley trip?
Rampant responses to a hyperthetical question gents.
No squirming at this end mate. It appears that this forum is dominated by a few individuals and their disciples, new trains of thought unwelcome.
Someone in the coming weeks will end up in this position and the question was a simple one.
Not quite sure what gives you the right to misjudge the question then take the moral high ground.
It's as if you're pater noster and ecce homo rolled into one.
I dont have one, it was a hypethetical question.
If I had then I'd probably give it to a lad I used to to BP with in the early 70's. He's down on his luck and can't afford the luxury of modern football. I'd end up paying his transport and subsistance too but so what.
as for the earlier statement re not selling out of tickets, highly unlikely. I think the dissapointment will start before the end of the sale to SP holders. We camped out, unecessarily, for play off final tickets, just for the craic being mid 40s at the time. I fear that may be necessary this time round