I’ve posted Podcast #163 to the “RobCasts” section of the site. It’s called Buffett Disappoints.
Buffett is one of the few straight-shooters in the investing advice field. But it would be a big help if he would speak out more strongly on the flaws of the Passive Investing model.


Rob:
(you can post this on your site or not — it’s intent is solely as a message directly to you. So, keep it private, or publish it, as you see fit, but please DO read it.)
1. Please state what it is about the Bogleheads thread on “Retired by 50” you find so ‘sad.’ I found it to be a terrific (and cautionary!) thread. Be specific and detailed, please.
2. I want to congratulate you on the last three or four podcasts. Not for their content, or insight, or utility to others, but merely that they illustrate the obviously sincere efforts of an uneducated and frustrated individual, scraping to understand economics and investing. Sadly, you are still not understanding the basics even now, and sadder still, had you taken an Econ 101 course at your local community college, you could have saved about fifteen years of inept bumbling in the dark. I know that the idea that you are developing some sort of unique insights, completely independently, is intoxicating. So you will be loath to give it up. However, something even more intoxicating is being tutored by others (while you still engage your own critical thinking centers), because your burgeoning (but still erroneous and incomplete) insights could have been gleaned in a mere afternoon with some tutoring and guidance of a text book and an econ prof.
3. You asked many times in those casts to be corrected if you are wrong. Okay. You claiming that Bogle, Buffet, and others are at the same (actually lower!) level of education, understanding, and insight than yourself (who flip flopped in your own view of the basics, over the course of just those few podcasts!) is laughable to those who have a grasp on investing, although I am going to give you credit for actually believing your thoughts yourself, as you have them. But, if you are really in a mode of trying to grow and learn, please put aside that notion that so many others, who actually earned degrees, did studies, and spent a lifetime actually working in the field, are somehow less knowledgeable than you (or the layman retiree JWR). It stymies your small new efforts to actually learn.
4. Rob, it is a darn shame to see you squander your time, passion, and interest when with some psychological counseling, and formal education, you can turn all that energy in a more fruitful direction. Good luck with coming to your own realization of what is abundantly clear to others, including your wife and family. I hope that your own economic situation will allow you to continue to follow your passion, but please do keep an eye out for the fact you have a family to support, and that needs to be your first priority.
Cheers,
DG
Rob,
I read how you are doing so poorly according to Drip Guy. What nonsense.
In contrast to what experts have recommended, you are ahead of the stock market investor by 4% per year over ten years.
Some people will never admit to reality.
Have fun.
John Walter Russell
(you can post this on your site or not — it’s intent is solely as a message directly to you. So, keep it private, or publish it, as you see fit, but please DO read it.)
In ordinary circumstances, I would not permit a comment with this content to appear here. It is part of my job to protect community members here from personal attacks. And I also see it as part of my job to protect the people who put forward personal attacks from the feelings of degradation and shame that go with having personal attacks appear in public places with their names attached to them. I believe strongly that Drip Guy is capable of better behavior than he is evidencing here. So as a general rule I do not think it would be the right thing to let these words appear here.
I am making an exception in this particular case (I have made similar exceptions in a limited number of similar cases) because I believe that every now and again the community that congregates here needs to see up close and personal (in the Goons’ own words rather than in my summaries of their words) what we are up against. Whether we like it or not, the reality is that the Goons have been successful in having a Ban on Honest Posting adopted at a number of discussion boards and blogs. So they have influence. Their Campaign of Terror against our board communities has contributed in a significant way to the economic crisis we are living through today. So, as strange as this reality is, there are public policy ramifications to the anger and contempt and hate being felt by Drip Guy as a result of my discovery of the errors made in the Old School Safe Withdrawal Rate studies.
Responsible people seeking to deal with the economic crisis in constructive ways need to know about the many flaws of the Passive Investing model. One very big one is the negative emotions that this model causes in those who come to believe in it for a time — feelings of shame and guilt and hate and anger and contempt and defensiveness. The feelings that Drip Guy is experiencing are part of the problem, and not a small part.
I am not going to permit follow-up posts by Drip Guy that contain equal amounts of abusiveness. However,he will always be warmly welcomed to make any constructive contributions that he is willing to put forward (as he has done from time to time in the past).
Rob
Please state what it is about the Bogleheads thread on “Retired by 50? you find so ’sad.’
It’s sad that you have permitted a difference on an investing topic to fill you with such hate, Drip Guy.
Rob
I want to congratulate you on the last three or four podcasts. Not for their content, or insight, or utility to others, but merely that they illustrate the obviously sincere efforts of an uneducated and frustrated individual, scraping to understand economics and investing.
I am glad to hear that you believe me to be sincere, Drip Guy.
Rob
your burgeoning (but still erroneous and incomplete) insights could have been gleaned in a mere afternoon with some tutoring and guidance of a text book and an econ prof.
Yeah, yeah.
Rob
You claiming that Bogle, Buffet, and others are at the same (actually lower!) level of education, understanding, and insight than yourself (who flip flopped in your own view of the basics, over the course of just those few podcasts!) is laughable to those who have a grasp on investing
You should stop laughing, Drip Guy.
I have the greatest possible respect for Bogle and Buffett and all the others that I have discussed on my podcasts. If your point is that we should be grateful for the insights developed by these people, we are in 100 percent agreement.
It is also a stone cold fact that I put a post to the Motley Fool board on the morning of May 13, 2002, pointing out the errors in the Old School Safe Withdrawal Rate studies and that those studies have not been corrected to this day. Bogle hasn’t taken serious steps to have them corrected. Buffett hasn’t taken serious steps to have them corrected.
I have taken many steps. I have warned people about the Old School studies on numerous boards and blogs. I have co-developed a calculator that gets the numbers right. I have issued press releases. I have recorded podcasts. I have contacted numerous experts. I have contacted financial publications, like Money magazine.
There are millions of middle-class investors who are going to suffer failed retirements because of the errors made in those studies in the event that stocks perform in the future anything at all as they have always performed in the past. I am letting down those millions if I pretend that this is not a significant matter. It is a significant matter.
On this significant matter (and I believe on a few others as well), I am obviously miles ahead of Bogle and Buffett and lots of other big names. That’s not a brag, Drip Guy. That’s simply the way it is, a fact that can be verified by making reference to the Post Archives of our discussions. I and millions of other middle-class investors have properly recognized the contributions of the big names. The ball is now in their court to recognize the contributions of the hundreds of members of the Retire Early and Indexing discussion-board communities who developed the insights we explore here on a daily basis and to take the steps needed to bring an end to this economic crisis by accepting their share of the responsibility for the problem.
That’s my sincere take re that one, Drip Guy. I love these people. Part of loving them is pointing out to them when they have gotten it wrong. They are in the wrong to fail to speak in strong language about the analytical errors in the Old School SWR studies and about the grave flaws in the Passive Investing model that have been brought to public light during the discussions held in our board communities over the past seven years.
Rob
please do keep an eye out for the fact you have a family to support, and that needs to be your first priority.
Got it, Drip Guy.
Rob
Some people will never admit to reality.
It shouldn’t matter, John.
In all fields of human endeavor, there are outlier personalities that refuse to acknowledge realities. Life goes on.
The problem we face is that people in positions of responsibility have failed to act for seven years now re the Goon Problem.
That’s not a question of not understanding some aspect of the stock investing puzzle. We are talking here about people who have used threats of physical violence to intimidate thousands of people into not talking about errors that have been discovered in studies that millions of us use to plan our retirements.
There are always going to be people who lack a complete understanding of how stock investing works. That’s just the way it is and the way it always will be. We have witnessed something beyond that here.
No decent person should be required to participate at a discussion board or blog side by side with the sorts of individuals who put forward the sorts of posts we see put forward by Drip Guy on a regular basis. John Bogle should not be permitting the Bogleheads.org board to use his name to promote their board, knowing what he knows about the long history of abusive posting by the “leaders” of that board community. Money magazine should not be linking to that board without commenting on the Ban on Honest Posting that applies there (I know that they know because I wrote the editor there an e-mail providing the background).
The root problem here is not a matter of differences of opinion on investing questions. It is a matter of whether we recognize our responsibilities both to ourselves and to those who listen to our words to conduct ourselves in a civil and reasonable manner and to insist that those with whom we associate make sincere efforts to do the same. We have seen large numbers of people engage in unacceptable behavior.
If it were just Drip Guy, we could all laugh if off as being just some internet thug making a jackass of himself. It’s not just Drip Guy. Drip Guy gets away with what he gets away with because a large number of people who would never spend three seconds in the same room with someone who behaves in the manner in which Drip Guy frequently behaves have held themselves to a far, far, far lower standard of behavior on the internet than they would ever consider holding themselves to anywhere else.
Not good.
Rob
yourself (who flip flopped in your own view of the basics, over the course of just those few podcasts!)
These words make a legitimate point.
There is at least a limited amount of flip-flopping going on in the most recent three podcasts. And on a very basic question!
This shouldn’t be. We should all know this stuff. We should all have the ABCs down cold.
The other side of the story is that the “experts” who have endorsed Passive Investing are not flip-flopping over the basic questions of how stock investing works.
Which is the better course of action, to recognize that there are holes in a theory and to go about efforts to fill them, a process that usually entails a certain amount of flip-flopping? Or to ignore the problem and just continue endorsing an investing model for 28 years after academic research has been published showing that the chances that it could work in the real world are precisely zero?
I look forward to the day when Bogle is flip-flopping right along beside me. And Bernstein too. And Burns too. And Clements too. And Schultheis too. And Kitces too. And Bengin too.
Flip-flopping is the beginning of knowledge. It’s not always pretty to look at. But I think it would be fair to say that the record of our efforts over the past seven years shows that it gets the job done better than the alternative.
It ain’t what you don’t know that kills you most often. It’s what you know for certain that just isn’t so. One of the things we’ve learned for sure over the past seven years is how much we don’t know. So sayeth Rob Bennett, the Reluctant Investing “Expert.”
Rob