..because it gives me the perfect opportunity to ask you to back up the shit you say.
Throughout this entire thread you've basically just told people who are putting forth affirmative arguments that they don't know shit without any substantiation. I asked a number of questions of Odrirg, none of which have been answered by anybody, including you. And since you seem to be so fucking smart, I'd love for you to actually tell my why I'm wrong instead of just telling me that I'm wrong. Here's what you said:
>It's not as simple as checking a fucking box on a piece of paper. Talk to an accountant (I have), try to form a company (I have), get some basic >understanding of business (like I do) before talking out of your ass.
If you were trying to be funny, you did very well. If you're trying to point out my ignorance, you've just epically fucking failed. I have both a business degree and a law degree from top 50 schools. (Not said to impress, only to show that I didn't get my degree from the same place Lionel Hutz did) In both programs, I took coursework dealing specifically with corporate form, including one law class in which the only thing that we did was to design corporations appropriate to given fact sets and then draft the articles of incorporation and operating agreements for said corporations. If you wanted to wax on about the comparative benefits and drawbacks of the various corporate forms I certainly could, but it would cost you a couple hundred bucks an hour. So, just take a wild guess how fucking impressed I am that you've talked to an accountant and thought about starting a business.
But I'm sure I just don't know what I'm talking about, so please enlighten me as to why specifically he couldn't use any one of a number of differing LLC vehicles to protect his personal liability. Also, please relate to me the basic understanding of business that I lack, because I would really like to know about business, since it seems to be the sorta thing that is kinda important in today's world. I am, of course, just guessing.