No I didn't cherry pick. I addressed the fundamental point the rest derived from. I don't need to repeat myself debunking things line by line when you cut things off at the foundation. But since logical progression needs to be called out I guess... let's do it the long way.
The $2 pin cited was not a $20 pin... so trying to compare the $20 price to determine the actual discount seen of the pin selling at $2 is completely irrelevant. Just because I see pinA being sold at $2 does not mean I will see the $20 pinB being sold at $2 as well (your logical fallacy). So the discount of 2/20 has no bearing on anything. The $20 price means absolutely nothing at all.. unless you are citing what the asking price of the $20 pin was... which.. was not even part of the discussion. So stop trying to bring in OTHER prices of unrelated products are to compute the discount of other.
Your point is like trying to counter what the normal discount when buying a honda car is... by comparing someone's buying price of a honda... with the retail price of a Toyota Truck. They are both cars, they both are discounted... but you don't compute the discount of the honda by comparing it to the list price of the Toyota.
Happy now??
You did cherry pick. Just as you have cherry picked your own interpretation of 18 U.S. Code § 2320 - Trafficking in counterfeit goods or services, that you reference in an early post to imply that people that are trading pins that happen to be counterfeit are guilty of some federal crime. The key bit in that legal bit you referenced but appeared to not actually read or understand is listed below:
(a)Offenses.— Whoever intentionally—
(1) traffics in goods or services and knowingly uses a counterfeit mark on or in connection with such goods or services,
(2) traffics in labels, patches, stickers, wrappers, badges, emblems, medallions, charms, boxes, containers, cans, cases, hangtags, documentation, or packaging of any type or nature, knowing that a counterfeit mark has been applied thereto, the use of which is likely to cause confusion, to cause mistake, or to deceive,
(3) traffics in goods or services knowing that such good or service is a counterfeit military good or service the use, malfunction, or failure of which is likely to cause serious bodily injury or death, the disclosure of classified information, impairment of combat operations, or other significant harm to a combat operation, a member of the Armed Forces, or to national security, or
(4) traffics in a counterfeit drug,
Because pins are not military goods or drugs you can ignore the last two offenses... but the first two are very clear. The trader would have to KNOW they had a bogus pin... suspecting it might not be real wouldn't be knowing, so even if you weren't sure you would still be safe. The only way this law would remotely apply is if you were making pins and putting Disney marks on them or you were told when you bought them that they were fake... Knowing is the key bit you ignored in that bit of cherry picking to suit your argument.
As for the last bit of rambling about not cherry picking and your rather convoluted bit on 20 dollar pins... well I have no idea what you were trying to say. Nor do I really care to try and figure it out. I simply can't let you spread half truths about what is legal and illegal that could result in some people stopping their kids from having fun trading pins because they wrongly believe that if they mistakenly trade a fake pin that the FBI is going to swoop down and whisk them away.