jhonny9546
Master Don Juan
Hey there! Johnny here!
Life isn't black and white, but sometimes it feels like success comes with a choice.
Either you stay good, follow the rules, and end up being controlled by people with fewer morals.
Or you become d1ckhead or a piece of sh1t yourself, climb to the top, and gain the power to use others instead of being used.
At some point, those men who made a work on them, will reach this crossroads.
"Turn left -> Be the good man you always was"
"Turn Right -> Learn to be a piece of sh1t and become successfull"
And if you don't make a choice, you've still made one.
If you keep going on that road by going straight, it will come back to the crossroads.
So you have no choice but one.
Also people, and women, gravitate toward winners, regardless of how they got there.
Regardless of who they are now.
Regardless if they are sh1t or good people, but they will follow who hold power.
Have you noticed that many manipulative people are constantly observing everyone around them?
It's as if they're always protecting their position.
They spend more time reading and controlling people than improving themselves physically or personally.
You can spot those.
The classic business man who never had 3 costant weeks of workout, or the Lawyer who can't follow a diet.
I know plenty, and those people are always talking, costantly talking.
Then there are people who naturally have very little empathy. Whether they're psychopaths, sociopaths, or simply highly narcissistic, those traits are just their weapons "normal" people cannot beat with anything.
Many end up in positions of power because they're willing to do things most people won't just because they have some empathy that blocks them.
And your hear people saying.. "Oh.. yes.. He is strong.. He has determination.." When this is only his personality disorder
So here's the question for us men:
Have you ever reached that point where you felt you had to choose between being a good person and becoming a piece of sh1t? If you chose the second path, did your life actually improve the way you hoped?
Over the last few years I've come to believe that good people can absolutely build a good life. But it often feels like they won't achieve the kind of success modern society celebrates, because they're playing by rules that others ignore. And still, they will feel controlled by others.
Society made this culture as a protection..
We create rules and institutions that give the impression of fairness, while some people adopt a far more primitive mindset: accumulate power, exploit every loophole, and take from others, legally if possible.
It's like they are still thinking like the caveman, and they are just "mors tua vita mea"
They maintain a friendly, respectable image while quietly maximizing their wealth, avoiding taxes, and finding every possible advantage. Outwardly they appear generous. In reality, they often see other people as opportunities.
They'll exploit good, intelligent people to bring them money.
They're very good at making others work for their own ends, and then they'll complain about how "people don't work these days."
I once knew an accountant who constantly complained that taxes left him with only 15–20% of his income after expenses. As it turned out, he had barely paid taxes for years and had quietly built a fortune worth around €15 million in 5 years..
Everyone admired him. He was considered one of the most respectable people in town, until it came out that he had built much of his wealth through fraud.
That's the contradiction I struggle with: it often seems like the people who play fair pay the price, while the people willing to bend or break the rules are the ones who end up on top.
Life isn't black and white, but sometimes it feels like success comes with a choice.
Either you stay good, follow the rules, and end up being controlled by people with fewer morals.
Or you become d1ckhead or a piece of sh1t yourself, climb to the top, and gain the power to use others instead of being used.
At some point, those men who made a work on them, will reach this crossroads.
"Turn left -> Be the good man you always was"
"Turn Right -> Learn to be a piece of sh1t and become successfull"
And if you don't make a choice, you've still made one.
If you keep going on that road by going straight, it will come back to the crossroads.
So you have no choice but one.
Also people, and women, gravitate toward winners, regardless of how they got there.
Regardless of who they are now.
Regardless if they are sh1t or good people, but they will follow who hold power.
Have you noticed that many manipulative people are constantly observing everyone around them?
It's as if they're always protecting their position.
They spend more time reading and controlling people than improving themselves physically or personally.
You can spot those.
The classic business man who never had 3 costant weeks of workout, or the Lawyer who can't follow a diet.
I know plenty, and those people are always talking, costantly talking.
Then there are people who naturally have very little empathy. Whether they're psychopaths, sociopaths, or simply highly narcissistic, those traits are just their weapons "normal" people cannot beat with anything.
Many end up in positions of power because they're willing to do things most people won't just because they have some empathy that blocks them.
And your hear people saying.. "Oh.. yes.. He is strong.. He has determination.." When this is only his personality disorder
So here's the question for us men:
Have you ever reached that point where you felt you had to choose between being a good person and becoming a piece of sh1t? If you chose the second path, did your life actually improve the way you hoped?
Over the last few years I've come to believe that good people can absolutely build a good life. But it often feels like they won't achieve the kind of success modern society celebrates, because they're playing by rules that others ignore. And still, they will feel controlled by others.
Society made this culture as a protection..
We create rules and institutions that give the impression of fairness, while some people adopt a far more primitive mindset: accumulate power, exploit every loophole, and take from others, legally if possible.
It's like they are still thinking like the caveman, and they are just "mors tua vita mea"
They maintain a friendly, respectable image while quietly maximizing their wealth, avoiding taxes, and finding every possible advantage. Outwardly they appear generous. In reality, they often see other people as opportunities.
They'll exploit good, intelligent people to bring them money.
They're very good at making others work for their own ends, and then they'll complain about how "people don't work these days."
I once knew an accountant who constantly complained that taxes left him with only 15–20% of his income after expenses. As it turned out, he had barely paid taxes for years and had quietly built a fortune worth around €15 million in 5 years..
Everyone admired him. He was considered one of the most respectable people in town, until it came out that he had built much of his wealth through fraud.
That's the contradiction I struggle with: it often seems like the people who play fair pay the price, while the people willing to bend or break the rules are the ones who end up on top.