If you start to find you're spending all your free time on a forum how do you go about breaking the bond? This has happened to me before, a few years ago, and I have no memory of how I broke the 'addiction'. Serious advice please.
Not asking the question on a forum would've been a good start.
The author of the article I've taken points from writes for people who have the time to read his mammoth pieces. This forum is for students who live fast lives. Editing with great largesse is highly necessarily to package solutions in accessible vehicles for target audiences.
Sorry but that's a load of crap, Mr Stoppable. You have used his exact words, made them relevant to TSR and passed them off as your own. You even have it in your sig as your own 'reppable wisdom'.
I don't mean to be a turd, but that is a rather sly thing to do. By all means use his material and give a link to his site, but don't try to make out that you are the genius behind it.
The phrase "recent reppable wisdom" does not mention the source at all - let alone allude it to me. Sue your primary school reading teacher, Joeyboy.
The phrase 'recent reppable wisdom' is written on your signature, and is linked to a post which you made, stolen from a source that you didn't credit. So you quite clearly want people to think that it is all your own work.
Don't make naive assumptions and never add spin. I'm pretty direct, so if you don't get a clear picture, you can ask for clarification.
Putting a spin on the truth is what makes some history books untrustworthy. It belongs in courtrooms. Now, tell me jeffers, are you a QC at the tender age of 20?
I'm not a QC, sadly. But I do have a somewhat deep-rooted hatred of plagiarists, especially those in denial.