Unpopular Opinion: Overreacting?

I am 32 years old, I own my own business, 8 properties over two countries, and an accountant by trade. I am now what I deem semi retired.

To save boredom, I got a job at GS, wanted to try retail for a change, but wanted a little something that kept me busy.

Today I'm preparing to dump $15,000 worth if GME stocks, I bought in Dec of last year when the company was at a low. This "light hearted" decision of theres was a terrible business move. It sheds bad light on the company, and honestly do I want to continue working for the company now....

Why should I? I can go chill out in my own place of business, maybe take up more golf?

I'm not digging at you, you're a GA right now. You will understand eventually. This is one of the worst things a company has ever tried to do, and they blame us for it.

How about the retirement of Dick Fontaine in May? When stocks started dropping like crazy?

How about the fact GME cannot keep thier focus straight?

How about the fact that buying new right now IS proving a better deal and GME have not come back with any deal to combat it.

If I quit, and I'm sure like many, it's not because of anger, it's because of a messy, bad business model that changes before it makes things right. It's about the "my GameStop" we had been tricked into thinking when yesterday they clearly made is obvious, this is "Thier GameStop!".

And finally the company will get buy if they have a mass walkout, but they're not doing fine and are nowhere near towards the amount of digital sales they need to be at.

To be fine they need to shift preowned, it makes up for the bulk of thier profits.

Please have some business sense and think about what is really getting ready to happen here.

/r/GameStop Thread