I mean sure, I think that's why it flew under the radar for so long. The dark underbelly of it was people buying love spells and the like, which starts to feel a lot like preying on peoples' desperation.
I find that genuinely fascinating from an ethical standpoint.
What if the people really believe spells work? Does it matter that they don't? Is it just the ephemeral nature of spells? What if I were to ship a complete spell in a bottle to the person?
(not to be too much of an edgelord) What about religious iconography or religious paraphernalia? I would argue that anything related to that is just a more accepted version of magic spells. Would prayer be banned?
For an e-commerce platform that allows returns: Yeah that's kind of an important sticking point and was a big part of the problem.
The other problem was that spells were effectively a service and you can imagine that we didn't want to get involved in determining the validity or accuracy of services being performed virtually that had zero tangible artifacts.
> What if I were to ship a complete spell in a bottle to the person?
This is probably what people actually do now to get around it, since there's an actual item being sold now.
Given that I am an occultist and a divinatory reader (tarot, etc), I see no issue with selling spellkits as goods to use. I also see no issue in selling spellcasting or divinatory services either. But I also acknowledge significant problems with companies allowing these to be sold and impossibility of validation or "returns".
Comparatively, selling spells can be quite easily compared with a Christian baptism, communion, the Catholic sacraments, prayer. The alms (baskets to collect money) is the cost for accessing these sorts of spells. Some Christian churches demand 10% of your earnings, which is way more than what some spells would cost.
Christians dont have normalized divinatory methods, so I'm unable to compare those. Their deity, YHVH, expressed a ban on that for most anybody - there exists a type of divination usable only by his high priest in Judaism while wearing the appropriate vestments, and only in yes/no questions.
From the occult community, what we see with "spell-selling" and the like is that it does attract frauds who are in it just for the money. Naturally, some here will consider any sort of esotericism to be a "fraud" - to those, nothing I say will be of any use. But the issue here is "How do you know if you're getting what's claimed?"
In order to know that you're buying a legitimate spell, the only way to know its true is if you can see and work with those energies initially... Thus meaning you would be able to do it regardless. Or you don't have those abilities developed and thus must trust who sold you the spells.
Of course, from a company's viewpoint, there's no way to validate spellcasting at all. Anybody could claim "fraud" and there's no defense against that. So it's easier to not allow these types of sales to happen. Effectively they're more problems then they're worth. (And doing a simple cursory search shows no christian prayer services being sold either... but that's easy to do with the abundance of churches in the USA.)
Edit: I'm really tired of having a discussion here, sharing my personal experiences, and having it drowned out with -1's. You may disagree with the occult. But it definitely is an area that Etsy had to deal with.
I guess the -1's are "I disagree with your lifestyle". Quite closed-minded, honestly.
Perhaps it has nothing at all to do with people disagreeing with your religious choices, and more that you posted one sentence in response, followed by a long off-topic screed that includes simplistic criticism of a stereotype of other people's religions?
Sounds like a great sibling gift tbh