It must be a weird situation; to be so wealthy (or able to utilise the wealth of others) that you can buy a thing for 40 billion, ruin it so badly that it may be worth half of that in less than one year, and STILL be on track, by some accounts, to be w...
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It must be a weird situation; to be so wealthy (or able to utilise the wealth of others) that you can buy a thing for 40 billion, ruin it so badly that it may be worth half of that in less than one year, and STILL be on track, by some accounts, to be worth one trillion by just a few years time.
It must be strange that how ever big your fuckup is, somehow inexorably, your wealth rises, almost as though it was a force of nature. What does that do to a person, mentally?
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Ryan Castellucci :nonbinary_flag:replied to π last edited by
@bloor Dude is pretty clearly deranged and is using the thing to impose his fucked up world view on everyone.
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πreplied to Ryan Castellucci :nonbinary_flag: last edited by
@ryanc but imagine you can make a financial mistake bigger than almost anyone else alive in the world and still βwinβ. It may be genuinely he sees himself like some kind of god.
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Ryan Castellucci :nonbinary_flag:replied to π last edited by
@bloor he probably doesn't see it as a mistake, he bought it as a toy