> I'm reaching out to my circle to warn them. I'm hoping they listen, but you can't save everyone.
Do it, but be aware that you shouldn't be the first to mention jews. The moment you express that, they will dismiss you and go along. Then you can come and say "see, I told you so!!" when it's too late.
Just say you know these "types of people," their practices, their history. When they happen to bring up the jewish question, tell them that that's what incentivized you to look into it thoroughly, because that is what they've historically done many, many times. That's simply how they operate. It is near certain they will do it again, and that many people will suffer for it, as they lose their jobs. You have sufficient indicators that point towards that pattern, it couldn't be more clear unless they'd explicitly say it.
Tell them you are not willing to torpedo the well-being of your people over money. That would be utterly selfish and you'd stoop to their level. Taking that devil's bargain would render you a traitor, and that's not what you were working for.
Do it, but be aware that you shouldn't be the first to mention jews. The moment you express that, they will dismiss you and go along. Then you can come and say "see, I told you so!!" when it's too late.
Just say you know these "types of people," their practices, their history. When they happen to bring up the jewish question, tell them that that's what incentivized you to look into it thoroughly, because that is what they've historically done many, many times. That's simply how they operate. It is near certain they will do it again, and that many people will suffer for it, as they lose their jobs. You have sufficient indicators that point towards that pattern, it couldn't be more clear unless they'd explicitly say it.
Tell them you are not willing to torpedo the well-being of your people over money. That would be utterly selfish and you'd stoop to their level. Taking that devil's bargain would render you a traitor, and that's not what you were working for.
I've tinkered with ChatGPT a lot and it's an amazing resource that can teach you all about the basics and some of the "blind spots" you might not have thought about in starting a business. It can literally type you up a Business Plan with market research, citied in APA format, that you can copy/ paste and put in front of investors or a bank ... for free!
If you're in the trades, it can tell you the equipment you'll need most frequently, and it can even tell you what jobs to avoid your first year that require more specialized tools that will be harder to afford/ justify in your first year. Say what you want about AI, but everything is there to get started. Anyone that works a job today is there because they want to be or they're not motivated enough.
My advice: get an idea of what kind of industry (not any specific work) that you want to get involved in. Then start meeting with people in the industry, from the highest to the lowest, and start listening to their problems. If you ask the right questions, or have the spark to connect the dots, you'll start finding gaps in that market or problems that need solutions. That in itself can be a business.
If you're thinking "Why haven't they solved those problems for themselves," the answer is often because they're too busy running their own business to take any time to think of solutions. Also, every industry is ran by Humans, and Humans get comfortable doing and thinking about things in the same ways. Having the "eyes" of an outsider is an advantage they don't have.
Nobody in F1 had heard about carbon fiber until a British engineer heard about a new material being used in American rockets to replace steel. Even then, everyone laughed at the cost and kept making their cars out of aluminum ... until McLaren swept the season. Today, nobody would think of making a race car out of anything else. A successful business, a business you can be proud of, in my humble opinion, is one that brings value though solving needs and problems. Not these jew "paper businesses" that skim money from rubber stamping paper or charging fees and fines.
I'm happy to help if you DM me, but you really should look into ChatGPT.
It is true that it sucks when it comes to "doing" the job people normally do, like programming, but it is still a very useful tool. And it is a great way to discover blind-spots as well, IF you are looking for them. Which can be relatively simple:
"I am doing X, and I am at stage Y, could you tell me if there is something I maybe haven't even thought of, which I should have?" or "I am doing X. Could you give me a list of things I could do wrong?"
And given what it is, it has information about basically everything. Car maintenance, computer parts you are looking for, programming, tutorial for things, cooking, finance/tax advice, business advice, health issues, etc. You just need to ask.