I don’t know the different between doomerish and realist. I am aware that every event has a two sides like a coin. No matter what it is, Elon and Trump look at the positive.
I made my doomerish comments based off of trumps own books. In Art of the Deal he talks about always walking away from a deal once. Always. No matter how good. He says people truly don’t appreciate you and what you’re offering. Offer a fair deal, then let that person/ company think about it.
2020 and onwards he kept saying, miss me yet? Or this wouldn’t happen if I was in office. I’m sure you noticed this. He also says revenge on people who’ve done you wrong or been disloyal is very important. If you read his books starting from art is the deal, it explains everything.
He also talks about thinking and talking big. Never taking no for an answer. Never giving up. No matter what. His childhood pastor was Norman Vincent Peale who wrote best selling books on being positive and speaking positive.
Yes. I am a big fan of Peale, Sun Tzu (Trump based "The Art of the Deal" on Sun Tzu's "The Art of War"), and Trump. I was taught to always be willing to walk away from a deal. This may be as we've seen with the Q stuff, etc.: a 60+ year plan to take the country back, and that "you are watching a movie" in that it's already over, and we won. Shrug. I won't be able to gather enough reliable information to ever know that for certain. But I'm hopeful.
I don’t know the different between doomerish and realist. I am aware that every event has a two sides like a coin. No matter what it is, Elon and Trump look at the positive.
I made my doomerish comments based off of trumps own books. In Art of the Deal he talks about always walking away from a deal once. Always. No matter how good. He says people truly don’t appreciate you and what you’re offering. Offer a fair deal, then let that person/ company think about it.
2020 and onwards he kept saying, miss me yet? Or this wouldn’t happen if I was in office. I’m sure you noticed this. He also says revenge on people who’ve done you wrong or been disloyal is very important. If you read his books starting from art is the deal, it explains everything.
He also talks about thinking and talking big. Never taking no for an answer. Never giving up. No matter what. His childhood pastor was Norman Vincent Peale who wrote best selling books on being positive and speaking positive.
Yes. I am a big fan of Peale, Sun Tzu (Trump based "The Art of the Deal" on Sun Tzu's "The Art of War"), and Trump. I was taught to always be willing to walk away from a deal. This may be as we've seen with the Q stuff, etc.: a 60+ year plan to take the country back, and that "you are watching a movie" in that it's already over, and we won. Shrug. I won't be able to gather enough reliable information to ever know that for certain. But I'm hopeful.