Steven Rinella
๐ค SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
Right on, man.
If they say it's there, it's there.
When they say it's not there anymore, it's not there anymore.
you have the added thing in your life though you've seen a lot of places where it's like there's poverty but it's overlaid with conflict yeah i've seen poverty but i haven't seen it overlaid with conflict yeah and so that's a that's a what you're seeing is a very different version of poverty than peaceful proper peaceful poverty is one thing but
I was telling someone about this the other day on my show and I'll, I'll give it to you to, to think about for a minute too, is I took this class in college called political rhetoric.
And we read,
You know, Dr. King, Camille Paglia.
One of the things we read was the Unabomber's Manifesto.
You ever read the Unabomber's Manifesto?
Okay, there's a, without in any way seeming like I'm endorsing, I'm not.
I'm saying there's a point he raises in his manifesto.
If you can get through it, it's very difficult to get through.
But there's this point he raised, which has always stuck in my head since I was in college, is he talks about there's these different, there's this way he sets out difficulty of task, okay?
And when he's laying out difficulty of task,
he stages them like one through five.
I can't remember if it's escalating or deescalating, but the easiest difficulty of task or the most difficult task is something where if you try your absolutely hardest, you have only a slim chance of success.
Let's say that's like, that's like level one on up to, you don't even need to try all and you'll succeed.
He said that humans do best at two and three.