I agree the customer should benefit, and in Dish’s case, their customers do. Year after year, they have one of the lowest increases. Customers should also try to get a better price... that is not the argument. The argument are the ones that feel entitled to the credit, and demand special treatment. Which is why I said, instead of making a big theatrical production of it, just leave if you’re going to leave. It’s ok for a company to tell you no, but there are many customers who think it’s not. There is a difference in asking for a credit and leaving if you don’t get it, and throwing a fit so that you can get it. Let’s put it this way, Dish has a blacklist. Customers who call too much or get too many credits eventually go back to the back office and that’s all they get to deal with. If they start pulling the crap there, they get cancelled. Those customers tend to throw a fit about why they were treated that way, and we have even seen some of them on this board, and they felt the were entitled to credits.