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Chapter 1484 Make money, make more money!

In order to let those stubborn technical oters understand the core of the capital market, Rui-liu clearly expressed his views on the capital market in his article:

In the capital market, there are only two rules for any transaction, namely: you are willing and reasonable and legal. As long as any transaction meets these two premises, there should be no doubts.

Everything Li Mu did follows the premise of "you love and I want" and "reasonable and legal", so he can be called open, upright and open.

As for the "robbers" and "bandits" at the entrance of Western technology occupants, rui-liu said in his article: In the history of world business, the real "robbers" and "bandits" are not any companies or individuals, but some once evil countries.

In order to support his argument, Rui-liu used the two Opium Wars launched by the imperialist powers led by Britain from 1840 to 1860 as practical cases.

He wrote in his article: "In the early 19th century, in order to reverse the trade deficit with China, the British government openly smuggled opium into China with the state as the main body. Even because of the ban on smoking by the Qing government of China, it was openly launched two wars of aggression against China between 1840 and 1860. If the legal principles of today's world are used to summarize the actions of the British and other powers back then, it should be: state-made drugs, state-trafficking drugs, state-armed drug trafficking drugs, state-armed aggression and protection of state-trafficking drugs. I wonder how those elites in Silicon Valley who think Li Mu is a bandit robber view and evaluate this history?"

Strictly speaking, the United States can be regarded as a descendant of the British. Most people are very friendly to Britain and even have a strong sense of intimacy. Many Americans believe that their ancestors are British, at least they were the first first immigrants to carry out large-scale development from Britain to North America. These remarks that rui-liu used the "Opium War" as an argument in the article suddenly hurt the hearts of most American elites.

Most Americans basically didn't know what Britain did to China in the early 19th century, so when they saw this article, their first thought was: Did Britain really do such a bad thing as a national armed drug dealer? Bull-shit! I don't believe it at all.

Then, they found out that holy-shit is really the case!

However, in Western history books, the wars of that year were packaged as they were to bring advanced civilization to the East, and to the self-defense of Christian culture in China by ignorant and violent self-defense. However, if a discerning person really looks at that period of history, you can see the flaws in it at a glance. You can defend yourself, but what is the matter of selling opium while defending yourself?

As a result, a large number of netizens who clamored to oppose and boycott Li Mu on the Internet knew that they were in the wrong and shut up in a tactful way, leaving only a very small number of extremists still clamoring.

Interestingly, the United States is generally a multi-ethnic immigrant country, with a large number of Indians, Africans, South Americans, and Southeast Asian descendants. Their motherlands were once humiliated by the iron hooves of the West for dozens or hundreds of years. If we really talk about national historical scars, they were the most painful wave. So a large number of colonial descendants responded to rui-liu's argument, saying:

The crimes of the great powers in those days were not just armed manufacturing and drug trafficking. They expanded their colonies around the world, plundered colonial resources, and massacred colonial people, and committed many heinous crimes. But now they put on suits and tied them, and suddenly became the most civilized nation in the world. That’s all, the key is that the descendants of these guys were so heartless that a company in their country had spent more money to acquire a company. They were about to come out and scold the seller as a bandit. What a fucking fuck?

A remark made by a man in the UK in Indian descent has sparked many people's approval on the Western Internet, saying:

"Our ancestors were enslaved by the British for two hundred years. They robbed our resources, slept our women, captured our men as slaves, and even changed our place name. The city of Mumbai, our country, was originally called mumbai, the name of a god in Indian legend. After the British came, they changed mumbai to bbay. It was not until 1995 that we finally mustered up the courage to change mumbai's name;

The British never think this is a mistake. They do not feel guilty about the Indians, but instead start discriminating against the Indians in the UK. They feel that these Indians have occupied their resources and robbed their employment opportunities. Last week, I was on duty at the 711 convenience store where I worked. A British man suddenly pointed at me and cursed: 'Get back to India, you damn thief'. I think those Americans who called Li Mu a bandit and robber, and those British who called me a thief should be all the way!"

The descendants of the colonies kept exposing the crimes committed by many Western civilized countries on their motherland online, which made public opinion betrayed by the indignant colonial descendants. They set off waves of denunciation of colonial countries online, so that as soon as those radicals who were hostile to Li Mu made remarks, they were immediately attacked by a large number of colonial descendants. Because the firepower was too different, these radicals quickly began to stop.

There is no longer any voice on the market calling Li Mu a bandit, and because of the angry descendants of the colonies, Western netizens have made up for centuries of world colonial history.

Rui-liu, who has worked in the Wall Street Journal for more than ten years, became famous because of this special article.

His articles have caused great responses in the West, and the ones that have touched the most were the elite.

After reading this article, financiers who had already admired Li Mu's actions praised Li Mu very much. Some even believed that Li Mu might become the only entrepreneur in the world who could truly combine things.

The combination of things in the true sense is not only to cater to the needs of the people of the East and the West, but also to be compatible with Eastern and Western cultures, concepts and values. In the business field of today's world, except for Li Mu, there is really no second person who meets the conditions.

As for those technical ottomen who originally regarded Li Mu as a robber and a bandit, they also suddenly understood that there is no right or wrong in the capital market, only pros and cons.

This article also suddenly opened up Wall Street and Silicon Valley's curiosity about Eastern philosophy. Eastern philosophy has always been not recognized by the West because it does not have a real system. The ideas and concepts of various schools of thought are not included in the scope of philosophy by the West because of their strong political colors. However, this time, talents in the Western financial circles and high-tech fields have begun to study Eastern military philosophy, and have even become a hot topic for discussion among high-end talents.

The two Chinese words conspiracy and conspiracy have also become the core of Western elite research and discussion. A large part of the reason why these two words become popular is due to the Westerners' familiarity with the theory of "yin and yang".

...

After hearing about a series of discussions caused by Western society around him, Li Mu published a short article in his personal blog:

"Talents in the business field always emphasize various costs, direct costs, indirect costs, visible costs and invisible costs, and even invisible costs of risk, pressure costs and spiritual costs... What top financial experts are best at doing is to fool the public with complex arithmetic problems, so that the public thinks that a penny cost is not because capitalists are terrified, but because it is worth the price itself.

By the same token, Microsoft will never feel that indos is priced too high, even if it has earned hundreds of billions of dollars in market value, and the small vendors in China will always make big and round waists under the fixed self-proclaimed "not making money" and "losing selling".

For myself, my first driving force in the business field is: making money; the second driving force is: making more money, which is nothing to hide.

In my opinion, the ancestors of China are the most wisest. Sima Qian once revealed the essence of all human business behaviors in one hundred BC: the world is bustling for profit, and the world is bustling for profit."

After this article was published on the yy blog, it received tens of thousands of likes and tens of thousands of comments in just a few hours. Chinese netizens highly praised Li Mu's open self-confessions. None of the entrepreneurs in these days would admit that they were building businesses to make money in public. Some of them were to revitalize national brands, some to promote national culture, some to improve the status of China Manufacturing in the world, and some to develop local high-tech industries. Even real estate developers who raised housing prices said they were to let the people live in better houses.

Only Li Mu, in this era where all entrepreneurs have to package a higher pursuit of making money, he frankly stated that he runs a business just to make money. Besides making money, everything else is nonsense.

If you want to revitalize national brands, you must make money first; if you want to promote national culture, you must make money first; if you rely on your mouth to revitalize national brands and promote national culture, most companies are using the national sentiments in the hearts of consumers.

What should I do if my Coke cannot beat Coca-Cola? Compatriots, come and drink a bottle of Chinese people’s own Coke...

Is it really necessary to rise to the national level just for a bottle of Coke? Of course not for ordinary consumers, but for entrepreneurs, the answer is unquestionable.

Soon, Li Mu's 300-word blog became popular all over the world, and even Western people made a special trip to his blog to like and leave comments, because even in Wall Street and Silicon Valley, where elites emerge, there are not many entrepreneurs as calm as Li Mu. Wall Street, Silicon Valley bosses, Chinese entrepreneurs, and even entrepreneurs all over the world are the same. They all want to make money while seeking fame. It seems that among the top rich people in the world, only Li Mu is to make money. Every other rich man is not interested in making money. Who is true and who is fake can tell at a glance.

Along with Li Mu's blog, Sima Qian's sentence is also popular all over the world: "The world is bustling for profit, and the world is bustling for profit."

What Li Mu didn't expect was that in the near future, this article will be called the father of "miroblog" by the Internet industry...

Remember the mobile version website: m.

Chapter 1,484 Make money, make more money! (Page 1/1)
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