So that's why i just throw old items away instead of donating.
Disgusting. Absolutely vile.
Please, go tour your local landfill if they offer tours. If not, find a local one that does. Or just go drop something off, and stand around until someone yells at you to get in gear, watching
how much stuff is thrown out. Bonus for identifying the good stuff you might have made use of, or could see someone making use of.
The average American is responsible for 5 pounds a day of
trash. That's almost a ton, per year, per person.
We buy too much crap, we buy places to store our crap we don't use (storage facilities are an ever-growing opportunity), and then we discard usable crap and buy more crap (But, Hey, Free Shipping!). It's vile from an environmental perspective, financial perspective, health perspective (look into new plastic offgassing), and plenty more.
Beyond that, what's it to you if someone wants to resell something you literally value at negative (it costs something to throw trash out, even if you roll it into a monthly fee)? It's out of your hair. What they do with it is none of your business, but if it's going to get used, resold, turned into parts to repair other stuff, literally all of this is better than it being ground to dust under the wheels of a landfill compactor.
And I'm also somewhat bitter about this "Ugh, they might do something else with it, I'm going to throw it out instead!" attitude because I spent a decent chunk of my adult life "working with the remaining residual value of discarded items." I drove cars that either came from the junkyard's "runs & drives" row, or that people were going to send to the junkyard ("Junkyard offered you $100? Great, I'll be up in 20 minutes with $125 for it!"). And then I repaired them, drove them, and got many miles out of them, and generally sold them in good working order to other people (I didn't drive for free, but I could typically sell a car for purchase cost plus parts cost, at least). I did the same thing with computers. If it weren't for people undervaluing "broken" computers, well, I wouldn't have had many (and it's been a very good career to me, though I hate what we're doing with them). Every now and then, someone would donate stuff to me, often in substantial bulk, under the "Pull the labels off, I don't care what you do with them, as long as they go away, and I don't ever hear about them again" agreement). They were going to have to pay to discard older computing equipment, and I was willing to do the work to haul it off for free, and then it would get cleaned, refurbished, resold, etc. I ate well (or, at least, better than I usually did) for a year on a business worth of computer gear I was willing to haul off one random Saturday evening, and process, list, sell, etc! And I certainly made sure nobody was going to trace the hardware back to where it came from.
I don't get the hostility to this. Now that I'm in a far better position financially, I try to return the favors to others. A computer that isn't worth much to me, I'll simply give to someone, instead of trying to price it and get money for it. "Oh, this would be useful for your project? Sure, take it!" Etc. I don't participate in any "buy nothing communities" as I find Facebook one of the eviler evils to exist, but I try to implement it in my local circles - I am generous in that which I have, and others are generous in what they have. A $200 computer isn't a big deal to me anymore, so if I'm not making good use of it, I may as well give it to someone who will make good use of it. Almost all my old computer hardware is in active use in my immediate social circle.
Buying isn’t a sin. Let’s be picky here.
No, of course not.
Other people buying stuff we don't think they need is the sin we must run down!
One car per adult for non-city dwellers. Maintain the car well and keep it for very high miles or a decade.
Only a decade? Not even average! The average age of the US fleet is 12 years or so. Keep the car for life, maintain it well, keep it on the road. Or salvage other things, though I admit I don't miss "staying up until at least one car runs well enough for the next day's work." I do have some far nicer cars these days, compared to my history. One is even under 100k miles!
I think what bothers the OP is the recipient claiming to want it for their house when in fact they plan to resell it. It's the dishonesty that bothers the OP, not the reselling itself.
Why does it matter at all? It's out of the OP's problem space.