One of the most important skills I see in successful (and good) people is to constantly reevaluate assumptions. They make predictions based on various inputs, some of them unknown, and reevaluate based on what they got right and wrong. They trust people not because they're always right--no one is--but because if you're constantly seeking the truth it's easy to identify those who are doing the same.
If you were confident that Donald J. Trump was going to lose, maybe you should question what else you "know" about him. Maybe the people who misled you about his electoral chances have misled you about other things.
In the words of Cormac McCarthy, "If the rule you followed brought you to this, of what use was the rule?"
@DanKarius@robbieschmidt33 HOOPS doesn’t raise money like it used to. Much of it is now raised by the kids rather than alumni donations and “membership fees”.
@DailyCaller Did an attorney write “Approximately two schools said the chances they continue requiring the test are “unlikely”? Approximately two? Too hard to count them?
@ThisOldHouse Why do you find it necessary to film in a moving vehicle? What’s the point? There are enough distracted drivers on the road, and I think you should demonstrate more responsible driving.
@thetrog I was thinking earlier today that there is very little reporting on this. There must be multiple videos but I’ve seen two. And nothing coming anywhere close to what might be considered scrutiny.