Antonie Walker scored more than 15,000 points across 13 seasons in the NBA. 3 x All-Star, 1 x Championship.
Total career earnings: $108,000,000
Shortly after retirement Walker filed for bankruptcy.
🧵
“A friend in Chicago created a real estate company, and I became a part of it..
We got caught in the [crash] of 2007-2008 and borrowed a lot of money through banks. I was the personal guarantor.”
-Antonie Walker
A single, highly-leveraged venture, in a field completely unrelated to basketball, ultimately undid a decade of sweat and sacrifice.
He was operating well outside of his circle of competence.
Walker now spends part of his time on improving financial literacy among pro-athletes.
His story is not uncommon.
~60% of former NBA players reported being broke within 5yrs post-retirement.
The key takeaway is being acutely aware of when you’re out of your depth and acknowledging it.
“You have to figure out what your own aptitudes are. If you play games where other people have the aptitudes and you don’t, you’re going to lose.” -Charlie Munger
To make matters harder, your circle is not some static thing.
It’s constantly changing over time- shrinking, shifting or expanding.
The best thinkers have a clearly defined circle, they operate within it and seek to push its boundary slowly and methodically.
Fail to recognize where it ends and you may be unknowingly operating in someone else’s circle without the necessary tools or knowledge.
React defensively to accurate feedback or evidence and you’ll find yourself in an ever shrinking circle.
The solution: Humility
It’s our learning muscle.
It gives us permission to publicly admit failure. We’re then free to explore why and hopefully update our perspective.
• • •
Missing some Tweet in this thread? You can try to
force a refresh
Satoshi Nakamoto cites eight references in the Bitcoin white paper that influenced the Bitcoin protocol's design.
This thread explores each one and its significance.
For context, the Bitcoin protocol combines several existing tools, technologies, and procedures in a novel way.
1/ ‘b-money’ by Wei Dai is the very first reference listed:
“efficient cooperation requires a medium of exchange (money) and a way to enforce contracts. I describe a protocol by which these services can be provided.”
Dai would also be one of the first people Nakamoto contacted regarding the proposal of Bitcoin.
As #Bitcoin adoption continues its relentless march, so too does the onslaught of misconceptions, red herrings, and illogical arguments. The result of ignorance, malice, or fear.
A thread of the most common regurgitated fallacies:
"Bitcoin is a radical break from the past. Understanding the way traditional money works doesn’t help you understand bitcoin.
If anything, it hinders it.
The people who understand bitcoin the least are monetary economists. They cannot wrap their heads around it."
—Andreas M. Antonopoulos
There appears to be an endless list of critiques and criticisms levied against bitcoin. But they generally fall into three distinct buckets.