I have been. This appears to be a polarizing issue. We either see it as wrong (for whatever reason) or not wrong (for whatever reason). In this instance, wrong equates to criminal. Criminal being something that should cause an eBay auction to be shut down.
Whoever said that today's generation is one of entitlement is absolutely correct, but I do not view that as a negative thing. We want the best and will not settle for less. The whole reason companies like MR exist is because people demanded high quality props. Short of stealing a lightsaber off a set or building it yourself (is there such backlash against lightsaber prop building and selling?) there was nowhere else to turn before MR started pumping them out.
And it was still illegal then. We aren't talking about food, water or medical care here. We're talking about a desire for things that is directly tied to a sense of egotistical entitlement.
Ever since I was a kid I have wanted my own Muppets puppets. If I had the money, I would absolutely buy one of these or commission someone to build me my own. When I saw the Pepe replica, my first thought was "does he sell these?". Master Replicas is making nice poseable Muppets, but these aren't puppets. It just seems crazy to me that people would rather walk around in the dark, bumping into each other, exclaiming they are the virtuous because they do not support Muppet replicating than own something that looks like something they love.
You know, that is EXACTLY what every stalker in history uses as an excuse when they are caught.
The fact remains: Just because you LOVE (or desire) something does NOT give you the right to POSESS it. That's not too hard to grasp, is it?
Especially when that something is owned, in it's entirety, by someone else. Even if that something is an idea or a likeness or a concept. You simply do not have the right to appropriate it without their permission. How is it that people just cannot understand the property rights of others?
Disney is an awfully big company. Do you think they are hurting for cash? I never thought I would see people shedding tears for the financial strain of the Mouse.
You just proved that you are willfully ignorant of the larger picture. The door swings BOTH WAYS. What if Disney decided they owned YOUR original character and didn't pay you anything for it? What if they turned it into an animatronic for their theme park and had it talking about the virtues of something you find disgusting? What if they manufactured replicas of it and sold them without giving you a cut? You'd be severely cheesed off, wouldn't you? According to the law, you'd have every right to sue for your property rights.
The same laws that protect YOU protect Disney as well. Its just that everybody gets all egotistically indignant when Disney enforces their property rights.
Just because you don't like somebody doesn't mean that you're justified in doing them harm. Got it?
-G