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 Originally Posted by Savy
There is actually a lot of evidence that shows the average successful entrepreneur tends to just get very lucky. Then we can get into how anecdotal evidence is literally the worst thing possible to support an argument. How policies that make you feel good aren't those that do good (i.e. what most people not clued up agree with). In fact you can find most people don't agree with regulation in their workplace as it prohibits them from making money no matter how but in general agree with it for everyone else because it doesn't impact them daily.
It's just rubbish.
That people tend to want reduced restrictions for themselves but not others is a real problem. I'm referencing entrepreneurs because they tend to be different than laborers in this regard, at least as far as I can tell. Entrepreneurs getting lucky is not relevant to my point because gaining great success as an entrepreneur is not and doesn't create much of the ideas that go along with entrepreneurship.
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