Success Is a Lie: They Let a Few Win to Fool You!

5 months ago
38

Brother Taj Tarik Bey Roundtable The Pope Letter 1 of 2
The video critiques the illusion of success in society, highlighting the high failure rates of market research and the dangers of chasing false hopes.
[153:13-155:10]
The speaker highlights the illusion of success, revealing that few truly benefit while many chase false hopes.
Do you understand? And let them off the hook, thinking you're going to get a benefit. Then you get real close to it, and they'll let a couple of them through. They keep everybody's blind faith. And then as soon as he gets the prize, and see, I got the prize. And I finally got the instrument. Now all I got to do is convert this. And then you're going to try to convert it. You know what they'll tell you? Boy, you can convert it. And after you convert it, we're going to kill your ass. Go back home. So now you got all these instruments, you done went through all the circle, got all these instruments, think you gonna get it? And it's like this, the big check. It's a big prize, and you got it. And they're hostile to you. And turn the tables on you. But I got a little of this, and then there's Raleigh, and I got a prize and stuff, and I'm trying to cash in a ticket, and I'm like, whatever. Show them for yourself. These Europeans and all these people since say the seventies when they started going on site drafts and then HMOs and then later UCCs, all really the same thing. and the transportation discharge instruments show me the handful of them that can show you the checks that they cashed and i'm not saying that somebody haven't discharged some things because they do let a few through to to keep the other dummies in the line you know just like say for instance like some other people claim to be somebody that you're not they offer a few more jobs on some barbecue sandwiches so everybody stays in line even though they know that ......... Barbecue. You understand? So they let a few look like they're winning. Whether you pay attention. Let's do this.
[155:10-156:11]
The speaker questions the validity of success rates in market research, emphasizing the high failure rates.
If you're doing market research for business, any business, correct? and you have what is called a 45 percent failure rate in business, is that called successful? No. If you have any market research and you have 50, 60 percent failure rate, is that called success? No. If you have a market research and you have what's called one percent success rate, meaning that you got say five millions of people that file instruments in the name of the acoustic number and one percent of them was able to successfully discharge some instruments not all just a few to show you that it works and 98 percent of no one else is still running in the circle for years and years and years Is that called success rate? No. And it was called con. And these people still fall for it in spite of it because they can't count.
[156:12-156:35]
The speaker likens the pursuit of success to swimming across a river, where only a few succeed.
Do you understand what I'm saying to you? It's sort of like everybody here, if you're swimming across the river, it's only a short street right here. There's just a little stream right here. ......... And you get on the other side, you know what I'm saying? You get these marbles. You get the check and everything and all this other stuff, right? And how many people have swum across so far? 9000, 999.
[156:35-156:54]
The speaker challenges the authenticity of success stories, revealing them as myths.
How many made it? ......... I know some guy who made it. Do you know his name? It's not personal. My cousin told me about him. Because everybody else said it. You know, they still working on it though. Well, wait a minute. That's not a success rate.
[156:54-157:28]
The speaker warns of hidden dangers in the pursuit of success, comparing false promises to alligators in the water.
Do you understand what I'm saying? As a matter of fact, if I look a little closer, they don't look like logs in the water. I know, I think they're gators. I mean, is it not the same thing? Is it not the same thing? Can you, me, or we, who've known about these things for all these years, count on one hand 5 men or women that have successfully mastered and got their hands on that bottomless pit of count of that Cusick number? And can show it. And can prove it to you.
[157:28-157:50]
The narrator discusses global context, including publishing and geopolitical tensions.
And publish it. But you got millions following on the trail. Giving this man time. Therefore. Putin and everybody got standing and just crashed this thing because these dummies is costing the whole planet. You can kill all their family and everything and give them a taffy and they stop fighting.
[157:50-158:12]
The narrator critiques human behavior through metaphor, comparing it to carrying an impossible burden for a distant reward.
Can I get the camera? Why don't you put the stack on my back and I'll carry it across the mountain and you just hold the carrot on the string and just hold it near so I can taste it once in a while. And this is what they do. And it's like they're so stupid. It's almost like it's actually an insult to nature.
[158:25-158:37]
The narrator discusses societal betrayal and the influence of Roman mandates on modern society.
And they keep giving this Roman mandate. Rather than render unto Caesar what is Caesar's, so therefore they're going to go down with Caesar. Because that means they will sell your babies out. They're unworthy.

Loading 2 comments...