Warren Buffett still lives modestly decades after building Berkshire, his incentives wired for permanence over applause. That quiet alignment is why patience pays when others chase the next story.
Real wealth flows to owners of productive assets.
Cybercab lets ordinary people own one that runs near 24/7, generating cash flow after costs—rewarding patient trust in aligned incentives.
@TrilionaireMind The quiet flaw in this timeless advice is how few incentives in modern life actually reward the patience required to trust it over decades.
"Winners feel earned; losses always feel temporary."
After big gains in tech during the late 90s, many held on through the crash convinced the story was still intact—while quietly selling steadier holdings. That emotional asymmetry quietly erodes portfolios.
Costco members willingly pay fees upfront, trusting the model to deliver year after year. That quiet incentive alignment turns one-time buyers into lifelong compounders.
True wealth flows to owners of productive machines.
Cybercab lets ordinary people own an autonomous vehicle that runs near 24/7, generating cash flow after costs. Patient capital and aligned incentives quietly turn it into compounding income.
@theRealKiyosaki The quiet truth is that reputation functions like an illiquid investment: it compounds through consistent behavior, yet erodes fastest when incentives tempt you to prioritize short-term approval over the respect of those who truly matter.
@themotleyfool The opportunity in volatility often slips away because it rewards those whose incentives favor patience, while punishing the anxious majority who lose trust in their own process.
"Skin in the game quietly separates durable wealth from temporary wins."
Buffett still lives modestly and keeps the vast majority of his fortune in Berkshire stock after 60 years—no fancy hedges or exits. That kind of alignment compounds judgment like nothing else
"Winners feel earned; losses always feel temporary."
After big gains in tech during the late 90s, many held on through the crash convinced the story was still intact—while quietly selling steadier holdings. That emotional asymmetry quietly erodes portfolios.
"Skin in the game quietly separates durable wealth from temporary wins."
Buffett still lives modestly and keeps the vast majority of his fortune in Berkshire stock after 60 years—no fancy hedges or exits. That kind of alignment compounds judgment like nothing else
@YahooFinance The real pause isn't in AI spending—it's in the fragile trust that lets executives chase valuations over verifiable outcomes, now forcing a behavioral reckoning no one priced in.