I keep waiting for this guy to be knocked down a peg and it never really ends up happening. The only time he seemed genuinely embarrassed was when he had to back out of that Zuckerberg fight.
He could lose 99.999% of his wealth, and still be among the richest 1% in the world.
To be in the richest 1% worldwide you need to be a millionaire. He’s worth $242 billion. If he only lost 99% of his wealth, he’d still be a billionaire, and still be 1000x richer than people who were merely in the top 1% worldwide. To be in the top 1% in the US you’d have to shave a 9 off that. He could lose 99.99% of his wealth and still be in the top 1% in the US.
Him being booed onstage at the Dave Chappelle show, or him being widely regarded as a terrible SNL host would’ve taken non-weirdos with some ability to self-reflect down a peg. For weirdos like him and Trump I’m not sure there is any “taking them down a peg”. They’re so enamored with themselves that they’ll never believe they did anything wrong or are incapable of anything.
Look I gotta say I’m not seeing this. Of all the things that would inspire someone to look inwards, I don’t see “not being a good guest host of a late night comedy show” or “booed at someone else’s standup comedy routine” as being good examples. That’s the kind of shit high schoolers think adults care about.
I thought the Cybertruck would be his wake up call, but somehow that is the best selling EV pickup in all of North America.
That’s the kind of shit high schoolers think adults care about.
Most adults care deeply about being embarrassed…some even more so than children. A very common phobia is that of public speaking.
I thought the Cybertruck would be his wake up call, but somehow that is the best selling EV pickup in all of North America.
If we’re looking for business failures, Twitter has cratered in value.
But again I don’t think it’s possible for people like Leon and Trump to look at failures or accomplishments with anything remotely resembling an objective view. They view things other people would view as failures as being someone else’s fault, or fake, or not as big of a deal as someone’s making it, etc.
If your entire worldview and personality is predicated on you always being right, and everyone that tells you “no” always being wrong, you cannot reflect on your failures without changing your entire worldview and personality.
I keep waiting for this guy to be knocked down a peg and it never really ends up happening. The only time he seemed genuinely embarrassed was when he had to back out of that Zuckerberg fight.
You don’t get knocked down when you have as much money as he does. He could lose 99% of his money and still be one of the richest men in the world.
He could lose 99.999% of his wealth, and still be among the richest 1% in the world.
To be in the richest 1% worldwide you need to be a millionaire. He’s worth $242 billion. If he only lost 99% of his wealth, he’d still be a billionaire, and still be 1000x richer than people who were merely in the top 1% worldwide. To be in the top 1% in the US you’d have to shave a 9 off that. He could lose 99.99% of his wealth and still be in the top 1% in the US.
You can get knocked down without being destroyed. Like if he were just forced from his CEO positions they would be great.
Him being booed onstage at the Dave Chappelle show, or him being widely regarded as a terrible SNL host would’ve taken non-weirdos with some ability to self-reflect down a peg. For weirdos like him and Trump I’m not sure there is any “taking them down a peg”. They’re so enamored with themselves that they’ll never believe they did anything wrong or are incapable of anything.
Look I gotta say I’m not seeing this. Of all the things that would inspire someone to look inwards, I don’t see “not being a good guest host of a late night comedy show” or “booed at someone else’s standup comedy routine” as being good examples. That’s the kind of shit high schoolers think adults care about.
I thought the Cybertruck would be his wake up call, but somehow that is the best selling EV pickup in all of North America.
Most adults care deeply about being embarrassed…some even more so than children. A very common phobia is that of public speaking.
If we’re looking for business failures, Twitter has cratered in value.
But again I don’t think it’s possible for people like Leon and Trump to look at failures or accomplishments with anything remotely resembling an objective view. They view things other people would view as failures as being someone else’s fault, or fake, or not as big of a deal as someone’s making it, etc.
If your entire worldview and personality is predicated on you always being right, and everyone that tells you “no” always being wrong, you cannot reflect on your failures without changing your entire worldview and personality.