Posted on 09/15/2005 7:03:21 AM PDT by groanup
Did you hear about the new Dem savings plan called Amerisave?
Makes an interesting $1000 government bribe to middle class voters who have sufficient disposable income to sock away such into a 401ks and forget about PSA's funded out of Social Security tax payments.
Bottomline it does little for those that need help with retirement the most, the working poor who will continue paying SS at the same rate they do now and will still have no savings/investment of their own or have any "security" in Social Security.
Dear Mind-numbed Robot,
Who gets socked now? Predominantly the upper middle class, with the rich contributing a very significant amount.
If the share of taxes paid by the rich declines significantly (and it will under the NRST), and the poor continue to pay, effectively, no tax (that IS the point of the prebate, right? to give back everyone the taxes they would pay at something around poverty level income), then, to stay revenue neutral, the middle class, especially the upper middle class, will pay more of the tax burden.
From Rush Limbaugh's website, I see a set of graphs that relate some interesting information. In 2001, the top 1% of households, by income, paid about 34% of the federal income tax collected. They paid 34% of the federal personal income taxes on about 17.5% of all personal income that year. The average tax rate on the top 1% of households was, in 2001, 27.5% in personal federal income taxes. Yup, 27.5% of income paid, on average, by the top 1% of households, in federal income taxes.
Yep. They paid about twice as much in federal income taxes, on a percentage basis, as the other 99% of the population, on their income. That's the rich.
However, whether you think they're paying ENOUGH or not isn't the point.
Whether some rich people manage to pay nearly no taxes at all or not, that isn't the point, either.
The point is, these folks pay a huge chunk of the taxes being paid. If they wind up paying less (and they will), then someone else will be paying it.
Interestingly, even if these folks spent 100% of their incomes on 100% NRST taxable purchases, their overall level of federal taxation would fall. They currently average, as a group, 27.5% of their income in federal income tax, and if they spent 100% of everything they earn on completely taxable purchases, they'd pay 23% of their income in the national retail sales tax. LOL.
However, it's much more likely that these folks will spend half or less of their income on taxable stuff. Meaning, the amount of their income that winds up in the hands of the US Treasury will fall from 27.5% of their income to around 12% of their income. That turns out to be an overall tax reduction for the rich of several hundred billion dollars per year.
Now, who will pay those extra hundreds of billions of dollars?
We know it won't be the bottom 50% of folks (these folks already pay nearly no income taxes, and under the NRST, with the prebate, will continue to pay no net taxes). I guess it's that 49% that goes from just above the median household income, up to folks that don't quite crack the top 1%.
I suspect, more precisely, it will be folks from about the 60th or 70th percentile to around the 98% percentile.
I don't have a MORAL problem with that result. But the rest of folks (especially the folks who wind up paying more) may have a PRACTICAL problem with it.
sitetest
If the share of taxes paid by the rich declines significantly (and it will under the NRST),
This not necessarily true at all. If I were "rich" as opposed to just having a high income, my options differ. If I won the 100 million dollar lottery tomorrow I would put all of it into Georgia municipal bonds and live off of the income and pay no state or federal income taxes. If I did the same thing under the fair tax I would pay taxes every time I bought something new.
From Rush Limbaugh's website
Exactly. The top 50% of wage earners pay 96% of all taxes yet the bottome 50% who pay merely 4% have just as much voting power as those paying their way. Under a NRST the non-productives would not be in such a privileged position of voting themselves largesse from the producers. The NRST is the ONLY way I see to avoid what is becoming invevitable - the loss of our republic because voters can vote themselves a free ride.
The rest of your post makes assumptions about tax brackets that I don't think you can make without citing sources. It also makes assumptions about the behavior of high income earners under a fair tax.
Those statistics don't mean all that much s-test if you'd but stop to think about it. They are based upon reported income which can be quite different than actual income. Someone with $1 million in actual income that manages to get his taxable income down to, say $100,000 (or even less perhaps) might pay 27.5% of that ... but so what?
He would then be paying 2.75% of his actual income. You're mixing apples and oranges and coming up with banannas when it is really fruit salad.
I happen to know some in that "top 1%" and I can tell you for sure that their reported income is much, much less than actual. You're trying to use numbers where they really do not apply as you think.
AFAIC, it is far, far better (and more fair) to tax the consumption rather than the income. (Most of the "top 1%" I'm aware of will pay more under the FairTax than the income tax). I doubt seriously if ANY of them come even close to reporting their actual income ... why should they when "milk's so cheap" as it were.
Those who are simply "rich" will now be in the pool of taxpayers under the NRST. Your example doesn't account for that "old" money class.
Dear groanup,
If you think that those who live off their investments only have tax-free bonds, then you really need to do a little research.
As well, if you have enough income, a lot of the income from those "tax-free" bonds becomes taxable. LOL. Over the last number of years, the range of "tax-free" bonds that remain tax-free to high income folks has been narrowed. The income from lots of tax-free bonds is now subject to the Alternative Minimum Tax (AMT).
Here's a quote from a link:
"Many investors buy municipal bonds because the income isn't subject to regular income tax. But investors should be aware that municipal 'private activity' bonds issued to help finance private-sector projects, such as stadiums or airports, are subject to AMT."
http://www.reformamt.org/articles/baltimore_sun.txt
I don't remember the rules, but I believe that general revenues bonds are AMT-exempt, where as the more restricted bonds that fund specific initiatives that are not strictly about building schools, public libraries, roads, bridges, and the like, are not. I've pinged some folks who probably know lots more than me about it.
I just perused a list of 128 currently-available municipal bonds, and most seem to fall into the "private activity" category.
But it doesn't matter. No one with, say, $10 million to invest is just going to buy tax-free bonds. Munis would be a small part of their portfolio. The returns are insufficient (right now, they appear to be around 3% - 4% per annum), and just don't protect against inflation.
If you're not getting an overall return of at least 7% or so on your financial assets, you can't both live on a significant portion of the income generated AND protect against inflation.
Most folks with that kind of money invest in various types of equities, some bonds, some other types of debt instruments, and real estate. Investment in equities will yield a total return, on average, of around 10% annually, for the long-haul.
The typical financial advisor to the rich will say, okay, invest your $10 million, buy some bonds, some other stuff, but buy mostly equities, so that you'll achieve an overall return of about 8% - 8.5%. Live on 4%, and let your capital grow, in nominal terms, by the other 4% - 5%. That way, you live comfortably now, and you protect against inflation later.
How do I know this? Because I've discussed with my own financial advisors how I will generate a living off my own financial assets when I sell my business.
"Your example doesn't account for that 'old' money class."
Well, it isn't an "example." It's actually the entire universe of rich folks. The simple fact is that on average, the top 1% pay 27.5% of their income in federal income tax.
If you don't like the facts, I can't help you. I can't change them. Neither can you.
sitetest
Well I love facts. Pinging people doesn't qualify. You state the "facts" as you see them, expect others to believe you, have no basis for your "facts" other than the fact that your financial advisor has told you what he thinks you want to hear.
It's too bad what passes for debate around here sometimes are pre-textual opinions. Is your pinging of your fellow SQL's every time you post a cry for help or something else?
If you think that leaving out an entire class of people who invest in municipal bonds and pay no taxes on them is justifiable then your research comes up short once again.
Any financial advisor who places high income individuals into muni's that are subject to AMT is subject to complaint and losing his license for a while. Kind of like putting munis into IRA's.
The low yields on munis at the moment require the use of laddered portfolios so that shorter maturities come due they can be re-invested in higher r of r's.
Many people aren't suited for equities. Why would a person who has plenty of money to retire with want to risk it in the stock market? That makes no sense at all? Your financial advisor tell you otherwise?
If you're not getting an overall return of at least 7% or so on your financial assets, you can't both live on a significant portion of the income generated AND protect
And if you don't NEED to take risk? Why would you?
"The government, under a 'fair tax', will keep records on ALL transactions."
Another paranoid concern by a anti-FairTaxer. The government will receive sales tax returns .... PERIOD. No detailed records of individual transactions are filed under current sales tax systems and none would be filed under the FairTax.
I almost included a note to make sure this wasn't misunderstood. Perhaps that illustrates another difference between us. I don't consider the desire to avoid taxes as evil, I see it as human and natural. Just as with the NRST, if it weren't for all the benefits that I SEE, speaking strictly for myself and intending no slight to you, for the good of everyone which will help me in the long run, I would be against it because I will change from a receiver to a payer. I don't willingly pay more without added benefit.
I'm not sure what you're talking about. Are you talking about the Earned Income Tax Credit, the EITC? Do you receive that? I certainly don't, and never have.
Another misunderstanding. I was referring to paying taxes, not the EITC. You have corrected that.
Our difference is that I see a benefit and you don't. Morality has nothing to do with it.
No, that's wrong. The Limbaugh figures actually speak to the fact that precisely 4% of federal income taxes are paid by the bottom 50% of households.
There is no conflict between that figure and what I said. Both can easily and logically be true. Part of the 50% who pay no taxes are in the top 50% of households and some in the bottom 50% pay taxes. That has no impact at all on the fact that about 50% of us pay no taxes.
But that will mostly stay the same under the new system, as FOLKS WILL GET PREBATES, and those prebates will add up to most, if not all, of the taxes paid by folks in the same bottom 50% of households.
You are confusing household income with taxes paid. With our present system that is not a linear connection. Under the NRST it will be.
Yeah, I agree. And that's part of WHAT I'VE BEEN TRYING TO SAY FOR A LONG TIME (Entrepreneurs taking legal tax breaks.). Even though nominal income tax rates are high, most folks don't actually pay anything close to the nominal rates, even in their brackets.
This seems to be suggesting that even though the rich pay a lot of taxes, the dollar sum is not as great as it may appear. That makes it easier for the increased tax payers under the NRST close the tax collection gap.
Sorry, Rush's numbers show that the "tax shelters for the rich" are modest, at most. The rich currently pay 27.5% of their income in federal income taxes. That will fall to an absolute upper ceiling of 23% under the NRST, and probably to half that amount - closer to 12%.
According to the numbers released during the presidential campaign, Theresa Heinz Kerry paid only 12% of an estimate $800,000 income. How did that happen? Is she unique?
No, actually, based on my own research, I think that the costs to which you refer (embedded costs) are very modest. I look at my own experience, the experience of other small businessmen I know, and the actual financials of large corporations. The costs are real. In absolute terms, they're in the many billions of dollars.
But as a percentage of GDP, as a percentage of the cost of goods and services sold, it's very, very modest. Low single digit percentages.
First, you can't dig that information out of an annual report. What you are looking at is the percent of corporate taxes paid compared, I guess, to gross income, although the taxes are figured on net. Using gross is the only way you can compare that to GDP, which in itself is a deceptive and wrong comparison.
Embedded costs are in everything the corporation buys and in the services they use. Those aren't annual report line items and most corporations aren't even aware of them. They are, however, in the costs they consider to price their own goods or services and to determine their profit and taxes.
In addition, the GDP includes ALL goods and services. That include the millions of small mom and pop businesses, every doctor, lawyer, artist, etc., who plays in the market place.
To take annual reports, which don't even account for embedded costs, your own experience whose embedded and compliance costs are minimized (that is not an insult, it is my opinion and it reflects human nature, not deviousness or evil), your friends and acquaintances who are also not likely knowledgeable about embedded costs, and then comparing that to the GDP is by nature going to yield a small percentage.
You know, that's a pretty insulting question, Mind-numbed Robot. You don't know a thing about my business, and you should keep your fingers off your keyboard rather than make asinine assumptions like that.
My business would exist no matter what the tax laws were.
I am simply amazed at your proclivity to find insults where none are intended nor, indeed, even there. In one of our very first exchanges you took exception to a nothing comment. I have been exceptionally careful since. Had I read your entire post before I started replying I would have covered this at the top with the others.
Are you aware of how many business advice and self-help books are written to help people decide their true calling and find the right niche for themselves? Are you in anyway aware of how many people are in businesses they don't like, tax benefit or not? I'll bet fully 75% of all people are in jobs they don't particularly care for. They are doing what they think they need to do to make a living and support their families.
For you to consider that question an insult says more about your insecurities than any projection on my part.
Would that you weren't so caught up in your own delusional system that you could ascribe decent motives to those who disagree with you.
Now there is a true example of projections. There is another SQLer that I no longer respond to because anytime his tail feathers get singed he runs to the moderater and cries, Mommy. they are being mean to me. You will be happy to know that I will not bother with you anymore either.
Tell your shrink I said hi. Don't look for an insult there, I intended it as one. If I were to say what I am suppressing I would be banned from even the Smokey Back Room
Dear groanup,
"Pinging people doesn't qualify."
Well, I actually stated why I pinged folks. Here is what I said: "I've pinged some folks who probably know lots more than me about it."
"Is your pinging of your fellow SQL's every time you post a cry for help or something else?"
No, but a request for more expertise.
"If you think that leaving out an entire class of people who invest in municipal bonds and pay no taxes on them is justifiable then your research comes up short once again."
Well, there may be some very wealthy folks who are that stupid, but I was talking about the entire class that comprises the top 1% of households, in terms of income. They have income that is about 17.5% of all household income in the US, and pay on average 27.5% of that income in federal income tax. Here's the link:
http://www.rushlimbaugh.com/home/menu/top_50__of_wage_earners_pay_96_09__of_income_taxes.guest.html
Now show me your documentation that shows that the very wealthy mostly invest all in tax-free bonds. Thanks.
"Any financial advisor who places high income individuals into muni's that are subject to AMT is subject to complaint and losing his license for a while. Kind of like putting munis into IRA's."
Well, there are a limited number of tax-free bonds available in the United States. One site at which I looked showed that there are about $1.9 trillion in bonds outstanding, as of the close of 2003. Most bonds are currently yielding between 3% and 4%. A little less for the AMT-free ones, a little more for the ones that can be taxed under the AMT.
That translates to maybe around $65 billion per year in income. That's ALL tax-free bonds, including those subject to the AMT. From what I can see, perhaps as much as half of these issues are free from the AMT (although I suspect in dollar terms, it's actually lower). That yields about $32.5 billion. About half of these are held by tax-free bond mutual funds. Believe me, folks with $10 million or more don't usually buy mutual funds. LOL.
Anyway, that leaves about $16 billion to accrue to all these very rich folks who buy all tax-free bonds.
But these households have nearly $200 billion annually in income.
Thus, it isn't really possible that most very rich folks are generating all their income (or even half their income) from tax-free bonds.
Like I said, tax-free bonds play a role in the portfolios of lots of very rich folks, but it's not the largest role by far.
"The low yields on munis at the moment require the use of laddered portfolios so that shorter maturities come due they can be re-invested in higher r of r's."
You can ladder all you want, the returns just aren't there.
"Many people aren't suited for equities."
The folks who aren't suited for equities usually never become rich. The ability to accept volatility and change is an inherent attribute in those who succeed greatly.
"Why would a person who has plenty of money to retire with want to risk it in the stock market? That makes no sense at all?"
Frankly, groanup, that's a naive attitude about financial assets. I've seldom seen it among successful business owners. I've never seen it among very wealthy folks.
Usually, this kind of attitude is more common among W-2 workers without requisite knowledge, skill, and experience in investing, or without the experience of successfully living from a business that may or may not yield the same amount of income every payday.
Your two questions reveal a misunderstanding on your part, that the stock market is especially "risky" as an investment vehicle.
It isn't. It's volatile. Prices of stocks go up, and they go down. There's a difference between volatility and risk.
Most folks buy and sell on emotion, and they buy when prices are high, and sell when prices are low.
When a stock is hot, and the price is high, folks think, "I gotta have that stock." When news of the company is bad, and the price drops even below its real value, people say, "Oh! That stock is in the toilet! I paid $30 per share, and now it's SIX! I better sell!"
So, yeah, you're right, buying equities isn't for everyone.
But most of the folks who get to be very rich understand the basics of investing - buy low, sell high. Resist transacting on emotion.
Volatility is the friend of the real investor. The real investor recognizes that volatility isn't true risk, just volatility. The real investor understands that there ARE risks in stock investing, but share price volatility isn't intrinsically risky.
A diversified, carefully-researched portfolio is not especially risky. The likelihood is that it will yield some current income, and will likely appreciate at a rate greater than the rate of inflation.
A portfolio comprising all tax-free bonds is very risky, unless you're 80 years old or older, and in bad health.
The risk comes from inflation. A 60 year old investor, living on his financial assets, could easily live another 30 or 40 years. In 40 years, the rate of inflation could quadruple the cost of living, in nominal dollars. That means that the fellow with $10 million, getting 3% in all AMT-free bonds (you pay a bit of a premium for the AMT-free issues) is living on $300K per year. Pretty good.
But in 40 years, his $300K may only be worth $75K in today's dollars.
Without the ability to grow his capital, inflation will eat away most of the value of his wealth within a few decades.
THAT's risk.
"Your financial advisor tell you otherwise?"
Absolutely. Losing ground to inflation is an ugly way to lose a large part of your wealth.
"And if you don't NEED to take risk? Why would you?"
The real risk for someone not on death's doorstep is to lose one's fortune to the ravages of inflation.
sitetest
Is this why Boortz wrote the article?
Perhaps you missed the thread where that was kicked around ...
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-backroom/1479691/posts
There are 1.9 trillion bonds out there and only a tiny fraction are bank qualified. MOST of that represents individual investors. Insurance companies are about 20% the last I looked so it's individuals whether through intermediaries such as mutual funds or direct.
But these households have nearly $200 billion annually in income.
Once again you're confusing income with wealth.
The folks who aren't suited for equities usually never become rich. The ability to accept volatility and change is an inherent attribute in those who succeed greatly.
I'm talking about those who have already made their fortunes. What do they have to gain from risk if they are finacially well off and have accomplished what they needed to accomplish? Any reasonable financial plan will remove as much risk as possible from a portfolio.
Frankly, groanup, that's a naive attitude about financial assets.
Call it naive, call it dull. I sure does preserve assets, create peace of mind, allow for a good night's sleep and allow for an optimal retirement. I once called a client bank of mine and showed the portfolio manager a 10 million dollar CMO that had just hit a 10% yield on our offered side. He took the offer in to the bank president's office and conferred. The president said: "Well that sure is a cheap bond, but, do we NEED it? Are we in such a position that we need to seek that sort of risk? My client responded "no". Then go buy a 7% treasury. LOL.
Your two questions reveal a misunderstanding on your part, that the stock market is especially "risky" as an investment vehicle.
LOL. Misunderstanding? 1973-1974, stock market cut in half. Millions of retirees have to return to work or defer retirement altogether. 1987 stock market loses 20% in one day. 2000-2002 stock market cut in half, millions of retirees have to return to work or defer retirement. Nah, there's no risk there. Hell, just hold on for the ride, buy and hold, you'll get your money back. LOL. Buy low sell high. That's the ticket, that's what the smart money does right?
The ONLY people that buy low and sell high are wrong MOST of the time and cut their losses short. Once in a while you hear stories about the little old man that put his life savings in New York GO's when the city was about to go under and bought them at the bottom. But successful trades are WRONG most of the time. They just let the profits run and cut their losses.
Volatility is the friend of the real investor.
Only if that investor is a hedge fund or a speculator. It's a dreaded thing for investors and a necessary thing for traders.
A portfolio comprising all tax-free bonds is very risky, unless you're 80 years old or older, and in bad health
LOL. Inflation risk is the LEAST risky factor in a muni bond portfolio. Back in the days of Paul Volcker I knew of a bank that kept buying long term munis as interest rates went up. Before long the losses in those munis were greater than the bank's capital. Fortunately, in those days, banks didn't have to mark to market. LOL.
Usually, this kind of attitude is more common among W-2 workers without requisite knowledge, skill, and experience in investing, or without the experience of successfully living from a business that may or may not yield the same amount of income every payday.
And after 27 years in the securities business I can say for certain that your attitude, which seems to be that all the axioms (lies) you have been told by Wall Street all these years are gospel, is not conducive to getting the best deal from the financial advice crowd. Why would anyone believe any investment guru? If the investment guru knew what was going up and what was going down he would just manage his own money from his yacht.
The real risk for someone not on death's doorstep is to lose one's fortune to the ravages of inflation.
LOL. Do you have any idea what inflation does to the stock market?
Even cash is an investment.
Boortz wrote the article because of what pigdog links you to below your post and because he is a lurker here and because RobFromGa, myself and others e-mailed him and told him he'd better pay attention to these questions.
Well done!
Dear Mind-numbed Robot,
"I almost included a note to make sure this wasn't misunderstood. Perhaps that illustrates another difference between us. I don't consider the desire to avoid taxes as evil, I see it as human and natural."
The issue goes like this. I've often seen, and you've done it again in these posts, the NRSTers infer that opposition to the NRST is most likely rooted in self-interest. So, I've seen NRSTers assert that Your Nightmare, RobFromGa, myself, and others, must derive our livelihood from the current tax system, or from some other advantage of the current tax law. Thus, you infer that perhaps my business wouldn't even exist without the current tax law.
This is maddening and insulting.
It's maddening because you people are so convinced of your own rightness that you can't believe that honest, well-informed people would dare to disagree with you. Unless it was against their self-interest.
It's insulting because the clear upshot is that you think that we'd put our own private interests ahead of the best interests of the United States. In my book, that's unpatriotic. Maybe it isn't in your book. If not, get a new book.
I've seen it repeated over and over. You usually don't make this gross misjudgment, but it doesn't make it any less maddening or insulting when you do make it.
Stop thinking that I have any other motivation than what I credit you with - the desire to do what is best for our country.
For myself, I'm not altogether clear whether the NRST would be better or worse for me, personally, except that I believe it would cause at least an initial recession, which would hurt lots of folks, including me.
Here's another way the NRSTers, including you, insult the rest of us - by calling us "status quo lovers." I don't love the status quo. I can think of lots of ways to improve the status quo. Some NRSTers have liked these ideas when I've expressed them, but most brush the ideas aside because it doesn't fit with their agenda.
I don't love the status quo, but neither does the NRST scheme appeal to me. It's a false dilemma to say that I must love one or the other, take one or the other.
The fact is, we may be in the frying pan with the current system, but I suspect the NRST, under current conditions, is the fire.
"Another misunderstanding. I was referring to paying taxes, not the EITC. You have corrected that."
Well, I don't know how you get from what you actually SAID to whatever it is that you actually meant (which is still unclear). This is what you SAID:
"That certainly includes me, I get an undeserved earned income credit, and possibly you."
Well, you don't mention anything about paying taxes. You DO mention something that you called "earned income credit." I googled "earned income credit," and came up with countless links. The first 30 or so all referred to the Earned Income Tax Credit, which is what I thought you were referring to, essentially a negative tax given to working class families with very low incomes.
Investopedia.com defines Earned Income Credit as: "A tax credit for low-income workers, even if no income tax was withheld from the worker's pay."
http://www.investopedia.com/terms/e/earnedincomecredit.asp
That's all I found when googling.
If you're talking about something else, perhaps you should actually say what it is you meant.
"First, you can't dig that information out of an annual report. What you are looking at is the percent of corporate taxes paid compared, I guess, to gross income, although the taxes are figured on net. Using gross is the only way you can compare that to GDP, which in itself is a deceptive and wrong comparison."
Well, I've actually known Fortune 500 CFOs, and thus, have some direct knowledge. As well, if a company is paying only 1% of its gross receipts in federal corporate income taxes, we may assume that the money it spends to avoid taxes is not significantly higher than that, since, to spend lots more on tax avoidance would give a diminishing return.
As for compliance costs, as with audits, etc., what NRSTers fail to acknowledge is that most of the accounting done for taxes has to be done, anyway, especially in publicly-held companies, as the SEC regulations for accounting are a lot tougher than the IRS regulations. Folks in really big corporations don't usually go to jail for tax evasion. They most assuredly go to jail for violation of securities laws.
Even for my very small, very private business, I know that compliance to thousands of other federal rules, regulations, and laws, ranging from OSHA to ADA to Family Leave Act, shape my business and cost me money to comply far more than the tax laws. As well, most of my tax compliance costs have to do with the accurate accounting of payroll, and the accurate accounting of the sales I make, and the accurate accounting of the purchases I make for my business. Guess what? I have to do all that under the NRST.
"You are confusing household income with taxes paid. With our present system that is not a linear connection. Under the NRST it will be."
You are confusing individual households with aggregate classes by income.
"'Yeah, I agree. And that's part of WHAT I'VE BEEN TRYING TO SAY FOR A LONG TIME (Entrepreneurs taking legal tax breaks.). Even though nominal income tax rates are high, most folks don't actually pay anything close to the nominal rates, even in their brackets.'
"This seems to be suggesting that even though the rich pay a lot of taxes, the dollar sum is not as great as it may appear. That makes it easier for the increased tax payers under the NRST close the tax collection gap."
That's a pretty wild non sequitur.
"Now there is a true example of projections. There is another SQLer that I no longer respond to because anytime his tail feathers get singed he runs to the moderater and cries, Mommy. they are being mean to me. You will be happy to know that I will not bother with you anymore either."
Well, with you NRSTers, the insults are pretty common, and pretty much expected.
"Tell your shrink I said hi. Don't look for an insult there, I intended it as one."
Well, I suppose you don't disappoint.
"If I were to say what I am suppressing I would be banned from even the Smokey Back Room."
Par for the course.
sitetest
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