Set forth below is the text of a comment that I recently posted to the discussion thread for another blog entry at this site:
Here is a solution. If you don’t think stocks are cheap enough for you, then don’t buy them. We are all big boys and girls here and can make our own decisions.
That’s a perfect solution, Anonymous.
Rob


Think of all the money you would have if you kept working and kept in the stock market.
I wouldn’t have $500 million. I have made a contribution to the world that I did not dare dream was possible when I was a young man. And I am confident that I will be compensated financially for that contribution in the days following the next Buy-and-Hold Crisis. We have laws that protect people who do things like what I did from people who do things like what I did.
I of course wish that we hadn’t seen any of the nastiness. We went about this in a completely messed-up sort of way. But I love my country. I believe we are a good people. The thousands of people who worked up the courage to express a desire that honest posting be permitted reaffirmed my faith in us. So I think we are going to end up in a good place. I am going to continue to speak up in support of the people of the United States over the sorts of individuals who have posted in “defense” of Mel Lindauer and John Greaney.
It will be interesting to see how it all works out.
Rob
You don’t have $500 million, nor will you get even one dime in your “settlement” fantasy. Getting a job guarantees that you will at least have a little bit of money.
You haven’t contributed to the world. Instead, you are likely a burden
Right. It wasn’t a huge contribution to point out the error in the Buy-and-Hold retirement studies 21 YEARS AGO. That makes sense.
If there is even a 1 in 100 chance that I was right that the Greaney retirement study lacks an adjustment for the valuation level that applies on the day the retirement begins, that contribution was worth a whole big bunch more than $500 million to the people of the United States.
I think the odds are more than 1 in 100. Today I would put the odds at 99.999 in 100.
But we’ll see, you know?
Rob