Yale Bock

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Yale Bock

Yale Bock

@ybock

My goal is think and act intelligently and thoughtfully. The people around me benefit.

Las Vegas, NV Katılım Mayıs 2008
204 Takip Edilen281 Takipçiler
Bill Ackman
Bill Ackman@BillAckman·
If you need inspiration today, this is it.
Dr. Lemma@DoctorLemma

19 years ago, a high school basketball coach put his team manager into a game for the final four minutes. The kid had never played a single minute of competitive basketball in his life. He scored 20 points. Jason McElwain was diagnosed with severe autism at age two. He didn’t speak until he was five. He couldn’t chew solid food until he was six. He wore a nappy for most of his early childhood. As a baby, he was rigid, wouldn’t make eye contact, and hid in corners away from other children. He tried out for his school basketball team every year and got cut every time. Too small. Too slight. Barely 5’6 and about 54 kilograms. But he loved the game so much that his mum called the school and asked if there was any way he could be involved. The coach created a team manager role for him. For three years, McElwain showed up to every practice and every game. He wore a shirt and tie on match days. He ran drills, handed out water, kept stats, and cheered every basket like he’d scored it himself. On 15 February 2006, the last home game of his final school year, the coach let him suit up in a proper jersey and sit on the bench. With four minutes left and a comfortable lead, the coach sent him in. His first shot missed. His second missed. Then something shifted. He hit a three-pointer. Then another. Then another. His teammates stopped shooting entirely and just kept passing him the ball. He hit six three-pointers and a two-pointer. 20 points in four minutes. The highest scorer in the game. When the final buzzer went, the entire crowd rushed the court and lifted him onto their shoulders. His mum tapped the coach on the shoulder, in tears. “This is the nicest gift you could have ever given my son.” McElwain won the ESPY Award for Best Moment in Sports that year, beating out some of the biggest names in professional sport. He’s 36 now. He works at a local supermarket, coaches basketball, has run 17 marathons including five Boston Marathons, and travels the country speaking about never giving up. When asked about that night, his coach still gets emotional. “For him to come in and seize the moment like he did was certainly more than I ever expected. I was an emotional wreck.”

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Yale Bock
Yale Bock@ybock·
Having read Barron's and grown up on Alan Abelson, it was a treat to be included in the magazine. In this case, if you have a 529 and don't have to use it for the intended purposes for the child, this can help. lnkd.in/g4eXyKPA 📷barrons.comThe Kid Isn’t Going to College. What to Do With That 529 Plan.
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Yale Bock
Yale Bock@ybock·
@wolfejosh @LTwolfe Thank you for posting this Josh. Really good stuff- always enjoy your thoughts
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Josh Wolfe
Josh Wolfe@wolfejosh·
For the first time EVER after her saying NO every time we were asked... my brilliant wife @LTwolfe allowed me to finally interview her publicly
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Vitaliy Katsenelson
Vitaliy Katsenelson@vitaliyk·
When I first came to America from the Soviet Union, I was told capitalism made people selfish. Yet the very first thing I experienced was the opposite: strangers from my aunt’s synagogue—people who owed us nothing—furnished an apartment for us, stocked our fridge, and welcomed us to America like family. That’s the first time I realized: capitalism isn’t about greed. It’s about freedom. It gives people choices. And when people are free, generosity follows. Charlie Kirk understood this. He knew that capitalism and free speech rise and fall together. Both require trust—that if you allow competition, resilience, and openness, the best will endure. Socialism destroys that trust. It replaces choice with control, diversity with uniformity, courage with fear. In the Soviet Union, no matter your talent or ambition, your path was already decided for you. Today, its echo shows up in cancel culture—where dissent is punished and conformity is rewarded. The result is the same: a society that grows weaker, poorer, and less human. Charlie refused to conform. He chose risk over safety, dialogue over silence. That takes courage—the same kind of courage it takes to build a business, to create something new, and to stand alone when it’s easier to follow.
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Yale Bock
Yale Bock@ybock·
Remember Sturgeons Law- not everything is worth a billion Aspiration Partners’ collapse leaves trail of losses from Hollywood to Wall Street via @FT on.ft.com/4mVrMff
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