I used to think it was silly to spend $800-$1k on a rifle.
I certainly did as well. My precision shooting journey, if you will, was very linear. To get to the rifle/optic/skill level I have now, I took a predictable and very common route. Also, my skill level is average, that statement was not intended to brag.
I started off with a Remington 700 SPS Tactical with a Vortex Viper HS. I still remember the days of being defensive over that rifle (before I had even shot it) when my friend told me that the Hogue stock sucked. At this point, my knowledge/skill level/equipment was all at the same level approximately. I didn't know shit about precision shooting, and my equipment was mediocre at best. The one thing that was NOT in line with everything else was the expectations I had of my equipment. When I wasn't shooting 1/4 moa with my hand loads, I started the long and frustrating process of finding the weak link in my equipment. The whole time I did that, I made another mistake I see a lot of people make - and never made the assumption that I was the weak link.
So I tossed the Hogue and got an XLR Element. Got a new trigger, and then proceeded to sell my used Vortex HST and try every single Vortex long range scope up to the PST Gen 1. I would buy a new Vortex, and sell my old one until I had literally tried them all. At this point, I wasn't convinced that moving into the category of the Gen 2 Razor would do much for me, plus - I couldn't afford it, which brings up another point. I did this, and I think a lot of other people do this.. I denied that I had sub-par equipment when compared to my expectations because I couldn't afford it.
Then, I had LRI true up the 700 action and toss on a Kreiger barrel. My expectations were so much closer to being realized! I kept the PST on there, and I was consistently hitting sub MOA steel at 800-900 yards with a .308. I'm not sure at what point my skill level and LRI build evened out, but I was finally hitting how I wanted to hit.
The next build I had in mind.. the point of the entire build was to have a build where I was 100% sure that any time something went wrong - it was my fault. I didn't want to second guess my scope, scope mount, blame it on the trigger... I would know every time I pulled the trigger there was no question that I was the problem. Whether that meant that my ballistic solver inputs were wrong, I calculated the wind improperly, or I just still sucked.. I wouldn't ever say to myself "You probably need to get better scope rings."
Maybe I ended up in a different place with my builds than other people.. or maybe I'm here for different reasons. Now that I'm here, I hate that I'm the guy at the range or the match that I used to hate to talk to. Me and my range buddy took out a guy who hunts elk once a year with a $500 .338WM and a <$300 scope. He was extremely disappointed in his rifle's performance, and I told him there was no way his Vortex Diamondback was up to the task. He just didn't believe me.
These are the shooters that are still in Remington's market right now. The guys like I was - the guys that deny that their equipment is shit because they can't afford better.