HaulingAss
Well-known member
- Joined
- Oct 3, 2020
- Threads
- 27
- Messages
- 9,796
- Reaction score
- 19,893
- Location
- Western Washington, USA
- Vehicles
- Cybertruck DM, 2010 F-150, 2018 Performance Model 3, 2024 Performance Model 3
- Thread starter
- #46
It looks like @Quicksilver and his "country ass" has the more optimal investment strategy.I invested when Elon was focused on Tesla and SpaceX, and when he had a clear understanding of the importance of switching transportation to electric and the threat of climate change. He's lost focus, no longer talks about the importance of EV's, cozies up to people who are anti EV, and downplays climate change. His values have changed, not mine, and we are no longer aligned and I no longer trust his judgement. I've explained why I think the recent rise in share price is transitory and why I think it's prudent to sell some. I still probably have more shares than most of you.
I very clearly explained my thoughts about the CT, maybe you should go back and read them.
I post here because I had a reservation for a CT but have recently decided I probably won't be getting one. Again, I still have shares in the company and still have an interest in how the company does.
I never said ignorance is bliss, that's something you made up.
I retired through my investments decades ago, my primary income is, by far, capital gains. I only have incidental dividend income because my largest position(s) don't pay dividends.
One thing I learned many decades ago is to invest from first principles thinking (even though I didn't know what it was called back then). It's more important to know what you don't know. One of the biggest investing mistakes is thinking you know more than you do. Judging by your comments, you need to work on that.
Elon's values haven't changed, it's simply that the world is a complex place and the answer is not always simple. Elon knew it would take decades to transition from fossil fuels to renewables, although he may have under-estimated what roadblocks vested interests would throw in his way. That requires changing strategies to accelerate the transition.
It looks like a new administration will actually get us there sooner than the old one (which was funded by fossil interests). Elon is not dumb and has *much* better vision of how the future will play out that your typical human. It has to do with the way he parses information in a more optimal manner. Don't think you know better than he. He's not always right, but I'm going to go with the person that has the better track record every single time. He's proven his leadership abilities while you have fallen into the trap of believing all the negative narratives made up by his enemies, people who don't want a fast transition to renewables. As an investor I know how much that can prevent one from outsized gains. Never invest with emotions or hunches, always use very base level thinking that is unpolluted from misleading narratives, unsupported beliefs, and faulty assumptions.
Tesla is in the process of releasing EVs so cheap, so capable, and so useful as to leave ICE vehicles in the past. And other manufacturers who want to produce vehicles of any kind should follow suit. This is the way forward, not wasteful $7,500 tax credits to bribe people to buy over-priced EVs while increasing taxation and inflation so much that it strangles the citizens of this great nation. That policy has outlived its usefulness and Elon knows it. That policy creates EV resentments, and Elon knows that. EVs have to stand on their own merits to succeed, and those who make ICE vehicles have to stop or go out of business.
This is the way forward. Elon did not become the wealthiest man in the world by being the greediest man in the world, he did it by having better vision of how the world actually works, by thinking properly about things, by having superior vision of the way forward. Elon's not being wrong-headed here, you are.
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