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I don’t think there’s any need to explain too much, but I really have found that some people are naturally inclined to “pass the blame” onto others, or they need other people to save them step by step—like when they’re afraid and want to close their position, they must have someone beside them to hold down their hand and tell them not to close.
Shouldn’t they first reflect on their reasons for building their position, their position size, and their decision-making process?
Actually, this isn’t a question of whether they can be saved anymore—their very existence is a calamity.
Yeah, yeah—if they don’t understand anything, they won’t thank you for the benefit they got, but if they suffer a loss, they turn around and come to berate you.
I thought of some news from before: some college students in Beijing went to rural areas to help farmers, helping them grow high-yield vegetables and fruit trees. In the first year, they made money. But in the second and third years, their harvest was worse year by year, because they needed professional seeds and fertilizer.
Yet the farmers blamed that college student for not helping them, for not being beside them, pressing their heads with their hands, and forcing them to buy seeds.
I don’t know what China’s economy is like right now—it ranks among the top in the world, and the large language models and chips it has made can even catch up with Europe and the US, and its fruit and rice are also cheaper than Japan.
How many people still have this kind of mindset? At least judging from the people in my comment section who copy homework every day, the proportion might be no less than 20%.
This absolutely can’t be explained by economic development imbalance—what else could possibly explain it?
Of course, I’m also really relieved that at least some people can stand up and point this out.
😅😅😅