| Hiring isn't about guesswork — it’s about data. If you know what people are like, you know what you can expect from them. I systematized this process to help match the right people to the right jobs. And remember, the evaluation process never stops. @TheDiaryOfACEO |
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Charitable Gifting This Holiday Season
2025-11-29
Trying to figure out your holiday gift giving this year? I have a great suggestion for you.
There are organizations like @TisBestCards and @donorschooseorg that will give a donation to your recipient’s favorite charity, on your behalf.
I think gifts like these are more in keeping with what the holiday season is really about, so I wanted to pass it along. #redefinegifting
The Best Principle to Deal with Pain
2025-11-10
Don’t just react to pain — reflect on it. To overcome any obstacle, you must think deeply about how reality works and develop principles to guide your actions. That’s the only way to learn from your mistakes so you don’t repeat them. The pain is the signal! @TheDiaryOfACEO
Ray Dalio on the #1 Issue Facing the United States
2025-10-17
Ultimately, it’s all about human nature.
In my view, the biggest risk we face are our own selfish, mutually-destructive tendencies. If we’re able to rise above them and find compromises, we can avoid the worst possible outcomes.
But to do that, we need to stop fighting with each other and align on policies that improve conditions for everyone.
Why are UK Debt Costs Higher than the United States’?
2025-09-18
Ultimately, it all comes back to supply and demand.
Debt costs are higher in the UK than in the US because the British pound is no longer a reserve currency. It’s not an effective storeholder of wealth because people aren’t transacting in it like they do with US dollars.
Since many people around the world transact in dollars, that increases the demand and ultimately helps when it comes to servicing debt. @MasterInvestorChannel
You can watch the full conversation here: ?si=1nUp9HME9GFIrC95
Ray Dalio’s Thoughts on Democracies with @ChrisWillx
2025-09-17
The increasing political polarization we’re seeing today isn’t anything new. It’s similar to what we saw in the 1930s, and it’s even something Plato wrote about a couple thousand years ago.
In democracies, people vote for their interests. And since people generally want more, politicians want to give it to them — and are willing to go into debt to make that happen.
Ultimately, things reach a breaking point where discipline is needed. People want somebody to get control of the government and make it work well.
But there are two versions as to who that somebody is.
In the 1930s, this led to the rise of fascism (for people who wanted a strong leader to lead a command economy) and communism (for people who wanted to redistribute opportunities).
Inevitably, these two clashing visions
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