#web3 || πŸ‘¨β€πŸ« I educate everyone on basics of blockchain || I sell gadgets too @01digitalhub || Learning loud.

Joined May 2020
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"As I share my craft, I realize that true glory lies not in possession, but in shared illumination. For to hoard magic is to diminish its splendor."
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Check quote and know there is diff to life than online shouts
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Is that what I think it is
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zero fugazzi 🌴 retweeted
She wasn’t expected that.
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Abeg wetin e mean if your babe send you the link to this video
Until you’re engaged, sleeping with other people isn’t considered cheating in a relationship! 🀦
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A failed person attributes his misfortune to everything else expect the real reason Which is himself
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Guy no watch the video ooo Cause you fit from their craze πŸ˜‚
Man shares message from talking stage after refusing her request for money for food
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πŸ˜‚πŸ˜‚
β€œMy wife told me that I’m not the biological father of our four children. Till now the mother and the children have blocked me; these are children that I raised for over 20 years.” β€” Man says.
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zero fugazzi 🌴 retweeted
Na small small I Dey understand why God no get wife
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Everyday another horror
Wait what??😳
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zero fugazzi 🌴 retweeted
As someone who partially grew up among European elite kids like him, this reminds me just how incredibly hollow some of them are. For a quick background, I went to one of the poshest high schools in France (Janson de Sailly, for those who know) and, afterwards, to what was at the time - and probably still is - the most expensive undergraduate school in Europe (EHL in Lausanne, Switzerland). Needless to say, many of my classmates were from unbelievably privileged backgrounds. Just in my classroom in Lausanne I had the son of a (very famous) Russian oligarch, the son of Italy's largest real estate developer and the son of Spain's largest real estate developer (funnily, the latter two were flat mates). Another classmate of mine came from the richest family in Naples, Italy and - while we were at school - his father (known in Naples under the nickname "Il Sultano") got arrested for having bribed half of Naples's city council - which, if you know Naples, ought to tell you something. These were the kids I was doing group projects on business ethics with (literally) πŸ˜… Anyhow, my story, and probably my luck, was that - before going to high school in Paris - I was raised in very normal public schools in the South of France where my friends were anything but wealthy. Their parents were farmers and everyday workers. Which means - and I'd come to realize this was very important in life - that it was easy for me to understand how big a mistake it is to see money as identity and meaning - and to confuse someone's net worth with their actual worth. What really struck me at the time was the contrast with my "poor" classmates of earlier in my life. They couldn't define themselves by what they had - by definition - and this forced them to reach deeper for their identity: their skills, knowledge, humor, etc. Rich kids can skip that entire process, and the tragedy is that most of them do: they reach for the readymade identity that money provides. I remember being incredibly frustrated by many of my classmates, like "ok, I get it, your dad is rich and you own a lot of nice things but who are YOU, what else is there?" The answer, more often than not, was nothing. To be fair, there were exceptions. One of my classmates I was most impressed by came from one of Zurich's wealthiest families (which, if you know Zurich, means insanely wealthy) yet he was almost OCD in not showing he had money: driving the shittiest car imaginable, living in a small studio, etc. He was very intellectual, very contrarian, and clearly at war with the idea that his family's wealth ought to define who he was. I only discovered who he actually was when I started my first company and he approached me to invest: to discuss the investment I went to one of his family homes, which it turned out was a literal palatial castle on the shores of Geneva lake. The guy had decided to live in a small rundown studio when he literally had a castle sitting empty a 5-min drive away. THAT I was impressed by: it's easy to see that money isn't meaning when you don't have any. To see it when you have more than almost anyone - when everyone around you is organized around the opposite assumption - is much harder. But to actually live it, to choose the studio when you have the castle keys in your pockets - with no audience to applaud you for that - that shows real depth. At the end of the day, I think, the real distinction isn't between rich and poor but between people who exist from the inside out and people who exist from the outside in. Wealth just happens to make it incredibly easy to be the latter, to skip the work of becoming someone and settle for a borrowed identity that glitters from the outside but is hollow all the way through. A Potemkin village identity. This is actually a real societal issue, and magnified by social media (with idiotic posts like this one πŸ‘‡): the more "outside in" folks out there, the less people with genuine internal anchors, the more fragile everything becomes. When you think about it, everything that genuinely matters in a society is built by people who think for themselves: they take the world in, pass it through something genuinely their own, and give back something that didn't exist before: an idea, a conviction, a stand. Every reform, every invention, every act of moral courage in history came from someone with an internal anchor strong enough to resist the current. Remove those people and all you have left is the current. This isn't new, by the way. Most ancient traditions warn against exactly this, from the Bible (the golden calf story) to Confucius, who built his entire ethics around the distinction between the exemplary person (the Junzi, 君子) - oriented around internal cultivation and righteousness - and the petty person (Xiaoren, 小人), oriented around profit and gain. The junzi builds himself from the inside, the xiaoren chases what's outside. So please, do not make the mistake of being impressed by wealthy people flaunting their wealth. Don't focus on the glitter, focus on the hollowness it's trying to hide.
16yo billionaire kid in Monaco. $100,000,000 secrete car garage. People don’t pay income taxes in Monaco?
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The comment section is wild brrrr
Sixth date with this guy. I’m bringing over panna cotta and spaghetti and meatballs and we’re having a movie night
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Why are yall angry in the cs she wants what she wants
I will not date a guy that shares an apartment or squat, I cannnot be with somebody that do not own a car.” - Lady said listing reasons why she would refuse to date a guy.
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lol
Inspired by the great Muhammad Ali You definitely don’t want to get into a fight with me!⚠️
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zero fugazzi 🌴 retweeted
It cost $0.00 to retweet this

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Who else also awaiting the racial slurs from the arsenal loose
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No allow money finish for your hand oo
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Just a question but why do married women feel like they doing their husband a favor by having sec with him
β€œJustice for married women; they want to use preeq and w0und me. You don’t know what God has done for you when you tell your husband no and he listens. Don’t get married, that’s my advice for you" β€” Lady
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This girls use any opportunity to extract This children’s day trend is crazy
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I sell gadgets palm oil And I play hard
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Women are needy species at every point You Can never see father vs husband BS It’s tiring seeing talks like this
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"I'll always prioritize my mom over my wife" Imagine being a child and watching your dad constantly choose his mom over your mom.
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