"BLERD"

One of my heroes said it better than I ever could:

"I prefer to be true to myself, even at the hazard of incurring the ridicule of others, rather than to be false, and to incur my own abhorrence."

- Frederick Douglass

The goal of this site is an ambitious one. It is my hope that it will inspire, encourage and motivate black children (including children at heart) to embrace their true selves. Apathy and pack running are so 20th Century.

Come back for thought provoking posts about literature, gaming, fashion, politics, cuisine, science, horticulture, art, fonts, aphnology, nomology, enigmatology, zymology...You get my point.

I'm a "Blerd" and so are you. Embrace it and pass it on.

B.J. Smith

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Secrets of the Tax-Prep Business

Over the years, entrepreneurs and corporate executives have devised any number of clever ways for getting rich off the working poor, but you’d have to look long and hard to find one more diabolically inventive than the RAL. Say you have a $2,000 tax refund due and you don’t want to wait a week or two for the IRS to deposit that money in your bank account. Your tax preparer would be delighted to act as the middleman for a very short-term bank loan—the RAL. You get your check that day or the next, minus various fees and interest charges, and in return sign your pending refund over to the bank. Within 15 days, the IRS wires your refund straight to the lender. It’s a safe bet for the banks, but that hasn’t stopped them from charging astronomical interest rates. Until this tax year [6], the IRS was even kind enough to let lenders know when potential borrowers were likely to have their refund garnished because they owed back taxes, say, or were behind on child support.

Hewitt didn’t invent the refund anticipation loan. That distinction belongs to Ross Longfield, who dreamed up the idea in 1987 and took it to H&R Block CEO Thomas Bloch. “I’m explaining it,” Longfield recalls, “but Tom is sitting there going, ‘I don’t know; I don’t know if people are going to want to do that.’”

But Longfield knew. He worked for Beneficial Corp., a subprime lender specializing in small, high-interest loans for customers who needed to finance a new refrigerator or dining-room set. His instincts told him the RAL would be a big hit—as did the polling and focus groups he organized. “Everything we did suggested people would love it—love it to death,” he says

(via the-feature)

  1. soumitra reblogged this from the-feature and added:
    ‘taxed’ is the word.
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  3. This was featured in #Long Reads
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