I kind of agree, to a small extent.
At least in the sense that it's pretty obvious that most people who buy expensive mics have no real need for them.
If you base yourself in reality, it's probably a given that 99.9% of us will never sing on a track that will garner any more attention than a bar owner evaluating whether he/she should take a chance and have your band come in on an off-night ... or a bunch of "friends" listening to low-fi MP3s on myspace.
Even those of us who get paid for our production efforts ... about 99% of our "clients'" end products will wind up in the affore-mentioned bar owners' boom box, or the myspace friends' computer speakers. In which case, the hefty expense of such a tool would be very difficult to justify, even to the pickiest of myspace listeners.
Now if you happen to be one of the select few who are "lucky" enough to be working on a product that will be listened to / purchased by the masses on a lucrative comercial endeavor ... then you will more than likely be producing said product at a comercial recording facility that will be more than well-stocked with
their own capable microphone collection. In which case, it would, again, be difficult to justify the purchase of said hi-ticket mic if the studio you're tracking at already has several.
And even if you happen to be an owner / engineer of said recording facility with capable microphone collection ... then you probably have no earthly reason to hang out on a site like this one.
So, at least to that end, I don't particularly see a realistic scenario, based in reality, that would warrant anyone hanging out on a BBS like this one to lay out any more than, say, 200 bucks or so on a mic, to be honest with you. I'm sure there are scenarios that exist, but I would have to be pretty actively creative in order to come up with or otherwise picture such scenarios.
So at least in that sense ... I kind of agree with you, in a way. Although I'm not quite sure I would state it in such blunt or harsh terms.

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