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BofA Debt Revolter Launches Anti-Tax Site

By now you should be very familiar with Ann Minch, the woman who nearly brought Bank of America to its knees with a YouTube video.

Well not quite,  but she did get BofA to lower the rate on her credit card, which is a pretty keen accomplishment in its own right and probably all she wanted in the first place.

Ann became a short-lived media darling and hoped to leverage her exposure to start an anti-debt movement that failed to gain much traction, perhaps because its main vehicle was a poorly designed website with little information and no community or social networking elements.

And if she really wanted to get out of debt, she should have slapped some ads on the site. Google probably would have even served some up from Bank of America and the irony would have made the Internet implode.

But instead, with her 15 minutes just about up, our favorite debt revolutionary has apparently gone all Tea Party on us and is now railing against “the corruption, greed and tyranny that has our nation in a stranglehold” on a new website.

Calling for a “civil revolution” the site asks Americans to rage against:

  • The totally-corrupt two-party system and
  • Out-of-control government endangering our lives, our currency and our freedoms.

I think it’s smart for her to go up against the political parties and government; they are far less powerful than credit card companies.

Go visit her at RevoltStartsNow.com and get your fill of all mid-1990′s-era web design you can handle.

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2 Responses to “BofA Debt Revolter Launches Anti-Tax Site”

  • You’ve got a good point in that “anti-tax” might be misleading to some people. But then she’s guilty of calling a few benign moves a “tax revolt.”

    In most revolutions, heads roll or get popped off by nooses. In this one, heads just get scratched.

  • Russel.G:

    Reactionary much?

    When you call a website “Anti-Tax,” it conjures up images of Irwin Schiff and other tax protesters using bogus ideas to get people to stop paying income tax.

    The extent of her “anti-tax” revolt is to stop loaning the government money interest free by adjusting your W4 so the withholding more accurately reflects your income tax liability for the year, rather than using it as a “forced savings.” That’s something most financial educators would support enthusiastically.

    And, yes, her websites are difficult on the eyes.

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