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Boldness is about having the courage to create something the world hasn't seen before. Blackish is a reflection of that belief. Crafted with a rich chocolate and peppermint flavour profile and wrapped in an unexpected black scoop, Blackish challenges convention while delivering the premium quality Dairyland is known for....

423,836 просмотров • 8 дней назад •via X (Twitter)

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"Courage is far shorter in supply than genius." - Peter Thiel "One of the challenges in writing a book about entrepreneurship or teaching a class on this is that there is sort of no formula. And I think science always starts with a number two. It starts with experiments you can repeat, things you can do over and over again. But there's sort of a sense in which every moment in the history of business, every moment in the history of technology happens only once. The next Mark Zuckerberg will not be starting a social networking company. The next Larry Page will not start a search engine. The next Bill Gates will not be starting an operating system. And so if you are trying to copy these people, you're in some sense not learning from them. And so I think one of the really big challenges in teaching or writing about entrepreneurship is what can you say about being an entrepreneur at all when the key thing is always to do something new, different, that's not precisely been done before. And so the point of departure I start with in Zero to One is a somewhat indirect approach by asking a series of contrarian questions. The business question is, what great company is nobody starting? The more intellectual version of this question is, tell me something true that very few people agree with you on. And this is a fantastic interview question. It turns out to be quite a hard question, even when people can read on the internet that you ask of everybody who comes in the door, it still is a hard question. It's one of those unusual questions where if you know it's on the test, it's still hard. And it's hard not just because we sort of think that new things require brilliance or something like that, but because it's socially difficult. If I ask you that question, if you tell me something like the education system is screwed up or our political system doesn't work very well, those are true answers, but they're not actually good answers because all of us already know them to be true. The good answers are ones that are somehow uncomfortable that the person interviewing you does not actually want to hear. And I think we live in this world where courage is in far shorter supply than genius. And so it is sort of this, it is in a sense this problem of political correctness properly understood, is this very deep, very, very broad sort of a problem."

Founder Mode

12,339 просмотров • 5 месяцев назад

They say the quiet part out loud, and no one says it more clearly than the unelected globalist EU chief, Ursula von der Leyen. Listen to the rhetoric: "You want to pollute while you pay, you want to avoid the payment while you innovate." Let's decode what she's really saying. She is telling you that the core of the EU's climate policy, pushed in lockstep with the WEF's vision, is not about saving the planet. It is about control. It is about constructing a permanent, patronizing system of penalties and permissions managed by an unaccountable elite. "You want to pollute? Fine." This isn't an admission of freedom; it's the setup for a racket. It's the creation of a "sin" that only they can absolve—for a price. They are designing a world where simply existing within the modern economy is redefined as a transgression. Driving your car, heating your home, running a farm—all become taxable activities. "And you want to avoid the payment while you innovate." Here lies the true hypocrisy. This system isn't designed to spur real innovation for the people; it's about funneling wealth to their chosen corporate allies and "climate projects." The €180 billion she boasts about isn't a benevolent fund; it's a slush fund. It's the largest transfer of wealth in history, extracted from the middle class and small businesses, and redistributed according to the whims of globalist bodies like the WEF. They claim it "worked" because emissions fell while the economy grew. But at what cost? This "growth" is a managed decline of your personal liberty and national sovereignty, masked by statistics. They celebrate a system that taxes the very breath of industry and then pats itself on the back for recycling the money into projects that further consolidate their power. This is the Great Reset in action. Not innovation, but taxation. Not freedom, but control. It's time to see the carbon tax for what it is: the foundational payment system for a globalist technocracy.

Camus

172,908 просмотров • 9 месяцев назад

What you're looking at started as something that most people drive past without a second thought. - Industrial - boring - overlooked And someone looked at it and saw something no one else was seeing. That's the whole game here. You don't have to invent something brand new to make serious money. You just have to see potential where everyone else sees limitations. You have to look at what already exists and imagine it just a little differently. So when you turn something familiar into something unexpected, it becomes shareable and memorable. It becomes the thing that people can't stop talking about because it's different in a world where everything feels the same. People will literally travel hours just to stay somewhere like this because different is the experience now. Nobody cares about another cookie cutter hotel room that they've seen a thousand times, but this gets filmed and posted and sent to friends with the caption "you have to see this place" And suddenly you're booked out months in advance because you gave something people can't get anywhere else. I love that the raw materials here aren't special, it's just space that was sitting there unused and cheap to acquire The success of this is found in the willingness to look at what everyone else ignored and ask "what could this become?" Instead of just accepting what currently is. That's where the opportunity is. There are thousands of: - shipping containers rotting in fields - old grain silos sitting empty - warehouses no one's using - barns that haven't been touched in decades And every single one of them could become something people would pay to experience if someone just had the vision to see it through. You don't need to build it from scratch. You just need to reimagine what's already sitting in front of you. Because the world is full of overlooked things waiting for someone to look at them differently. And I don't care if AI generated the video because the inspiration you get from it is still the same.

Chris Koerner

18,208 просмотров • 4 месяцев назад