gw
New Member
Posts: 3
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Post by gw on Aug 12, 2014 16:04:18 GMT
Poor Rob. He is SO deluded. As his audience steadily shrinks, what will he do next for attention?
By the way, I suggest that we all refrain from commenting at the plop. That might stimulate him to proceed to new, more entertaining heights of internet-crankdom.
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Post by yipeekio on Aug 13, 2014 16:59:11 GMT
I dunno, gw. Poor hocus is so whacked out these days I'm not sure he's capable of coming up with anything new. He seems quite content to rehash dog-eared old delusions and endlessly prattle on about comments of either recent or distant past made to the Plop. That said, I don't post at the Plop. I prefer to play Poke-the-Troll with him at arms length.
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Post by yipeekio on Aug 13, 2014 18:50:47 GMT
Probably because Mike Piper knows that his readers have no interest in the Bat$hit Crazy delusions of a mentally ill internet troll. They're more interested in learning about how to use the proven investment strategy known as buy-hold-rebalance.
If his readers have any interest in learning about Bat$hit Crazy hocomania and the delusions of the mentally ill internet troll Rob "hocus" Bennett, they're free to post at your Plop. By doing so they can get a daily dose of the the various delusions and lies that are so near and dear to you.
Hocus, don't count on Mike Piper or any of the other personal finance discussion boards and blogs to welcome you or your Hocomania Routine, aka "Honest Posting" today, tomorrow or any time in the future. Hocomania is an acquired taste. Most folks just have no interest in learning more about the delusions of a mentally ill internet troll.
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Post by yipeekio on Aug 13, 2014 23:18:49 GMT
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Post by yipeekio on Aug 14, 2014 22:57:54 GMT
No hocus, your delusions are of no importance. At least of no importance to the understanding of personal finance. They and the online case study of your mental illness are rather interesting and occasionally entertaining but both have little importance to anyone other than the small group of folks who have developed a taste for hocomania. Sadly, your profound mental illness is important mostly to your long-suffering wife and children.
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Post by yipeekio on Aug 15, 2014 2:04:26 GMT
From the Plop:
x says August 14, 2014 at 8:30 am Here’s another comment you made in that thread:
I am currently working on five long articles that I want to get posted before the next crash: (1) 101 Acts of Intimidation by Buy-and-Holders; (2) What 101 Experts Say re Valuation-Informed Indexing; (3) 101 Powerful Insights Developed Over the First 12 Years of Discussions; (4) A Q&A Article on the Ban on Honest Posting; and (5) An Article Pulling Together in One Place the Most Important Graphics Showing that Valuations Affect Long-Term Returns. My hope is that I can finish those by the first of May.
Since we’re several months past your self-imposed deadline, would you mind posting links to those articles?
Rob says August 14, 2014 at 8:41 am They are all scheduled to be published under the blogging software, X. As I complete items, I just enter them under the next available date. I now have items through March 31, 2015.
I hope that helps a bit.
Rob
Yeah hocus, that explains why you seem to be just mailing it in these days. Hocomania isn't like fine wine, it doesn't age well. You're chasing off what meager audience you have by endlessly rehashing old comments at your Plop. Come on, put that addled brain in gear. Come up with some fresh delusions to keep your shtick entertaining!
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Post by ataloss on Aug 16, 2014 22:58:54 GMT
Good to see that the hocomania board will continue in some form. Will the old board be archived?
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Post by yipeekio on Aug 28, 2014 21:57:13 GMT
Rob, in your analogy the alcoholic only took five years to overcome his problem and move on with his life. You've been trolling the internet for some 12 years now. Catastrophically unproductively. I guess the moral of your story is that alcoholism is easier to overcome than profound mental illness. Why don't you make that call to Loudoun County Mental Health Services today so that you may also some day be able to build a wonderful new life. A life with more meaning and fulfillment than pecking away at a keyboard in the isolation of 160 Hatcher as you bash all those who are more knowledgeable and successful in the world of personal finance than you are. Which is pretty much everyone!
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Post by yipeekio on Aug 28, 2014 23:49:40 GMT
Rob, all that gibberish is just more Bat$hit Crazy hocomania. Dog-eared, Bat$hit Crazy hocomania. The slow & steady investing strategy that is buy-hold-rebalance is not hard at all to understand. That's of course unless you are a mentally ill internet troll like Rob "hocus" Bennett. For everyone else it offers an effective means to invest over the long-term. Like any strategy which involves the purchase of equities, portfolio fluctuations can be unnerving to those who don't understand risk. Or for those who have no understanding of personal finance like the mentally ill internet troll Rob "hocus" Bennett. Both extremely risk-averse individuals and those suffering from mental illness like Mr. Bennett might well be better served by avoiding stocks altogether. Their returns might not approach that of more risk-tolerant individuals but they avoid the possibility of personal investing driving them crazy as it did the poor, unfortunate, mentally ill internet troll Rob "hocus" Bennett.
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