Ah yes, you totally forgot pizza gate and how when this info came out many of these weirdly priced/ expensive items featured on the website actually carried individual names of real children for each furniture item, that had been previously reported missing on various local/ regional official data bases and on some the furniture/ product number was their actual missing persons case file number - plus i remember something about the mayfair site having like hyper links in the product description that went some weird Russian site that you had to paste the product number (the missing case file number) to get into an email exchange for 'enquiring' about that specific individual item. Which iirc was also password protected. A lot of very weird shit, where there should have been zero.
Plus, as to the company's response, what online selling companies puts items online for sale - without already determining a price for said item?. Unless they then wish to engage in the legal concept of offer and acceptance, ie 'negotiating for price'. Again, just weird, considering that wasnt even part of their reply.
Or that some civilian pizza gate researcher actually tried to purchase one of these expensive / child named items but it keep failing at the cart/ pay now part. Got a hold of someone from customer service and basically routed around to finally be told 'it wasnt possible bc they weren't on the approved purchaser list for this item'.
To the conspiracy minded - the site sold genuine items but was also a front to (allegedly) purchase actual missing children from a third-party site supposedly out of Russia - where after using the hyper link and identifying precisely which 'item' you sought could then 'negotiate' a price and delivery etc etc. Having the name and or case file number of a missing individual could also be used to open-source identify age, race, height, weight, appearance.
dassar 1 points 1 day ago
Ah yes, you totally forgot pizza gate and how when this info came out many of these weirdly priced/ expensive items featured on the website actually carried individual names of real children for each furniture item, that had been previously reported missing on various local/ regional official data bases and on some the furniture/ product number was their actual missing persons case file number - plus i remember something about the mayfair site having like hyper links in the product description that went some weird Russian site that you had to paste the product number (the missing case file number) to get into an email exchange for 'enquiring' about that specific individual item. Which iirc was also password protected.
A lot of very weird shit, where there should have been zero.
Plus, as to the company's response, what online selling companies puts items online for sale - without already determining a price for said item?. Unless they then wish to engage in the legal concept of offer and acceptance, ie 'negotiating for price'. Again, just weird, considering that wasnt even part of their reply.
Or that some civilian pizza gate researcher actually tried to purchase one of these expensive / child named items but it keep failing at the cart/ pay now part. Got a hold of someone from customer service and basically routed around to finally be told 'it wasnt possible bc they weren't on the approved purchaser list for this item'.
To the conspiracy minded - the site sold genuine items but was also a front to (allegedly) purchase actual missing children from a third-party site supposedly out of Russia - where after using the hyper link and identifying precisely which 'item' you sought could then 'negotiate' a price and delivery etc etc.
Having the name and or case file number of a missing individual could also be used to open-source identify age, race, height, weight, appearance.