Time is scarce. We cannot read everything, so we make choices, in part
based on the expected quality of various articles. We have a rough internal
ranking of journals, that we revise based on our own past experiences
reading articles in various journals, and maybe also based on the past
experiences of other scholars whose judgment has proven sound. And if we
don't have much experience with journals, and our trusted colleagues don't,
we may put some weight on published rankings of journals.
And when we do this, we are being rational, not "scandalous" or "corrupt."
Maybe there's a better way to allocate scarce time. But what would be
helpful would be less moral outrage, and more elaboration of a better way.
Arthur M. Diamond, Jr.