@TrumpRealDaily ONLY CANADIAN CITIZENS can decide THEIR DESTINY, NOT YOU, NOT ANYONE ON EARTH
IF FREEDOM OF CHOICE GIVEN BY OUR CREATOR TO ALL HUMANITY TO CHOOSE BETWEEN TO BE GOOD MAN OR BAD MAN
HOW YOU WANT TO BE AHEAD OF THAT
@MadelnCanada Trudeau represented real Canadian values on the world stage. He's respected by honourable world leaders and has brought that respect to us.
@iamyesyouareno Not to mention they enslaved their own people first. Europeans just caught on. It got shit done. It does still go on today. Including record number murders against black on black. 🤷♂️
Get over it, you’ve never even experienced it.
Meanwhile there are literally MILLIONS of slaves in Africa TODAY, and you don’t care because you can’t blame it on White people.
This is a textbook case of luxury beliefs—the idea that someone takes a public stand that costs them little but signals virtue to others, while often having negative consequences for regular people. The guy selling his Teslas and cancelling his Cybertruck order to “boycott” Elon Musk isn’t hurting Musk—he’s just making life harder for himself and possibly for Canadian workers.
Why This is Luxury Beliefs in Action
1.Zero Personal Sacrifice (or Even a Net Gain)
This guy likely bought his Teslas at a good price and is now reselling them in a strong used EV market. He might even be making a profit. Meanwhile, his “boycott” doesn’t change anything about Tesla’s operations or Musk’s wealth.
2.Social Status Signaling
Selling the cars and loudly announcing it isn’t about change—it’s about showing off. It’s a way of saying, “Look at me, I have the moral high ground!” The people who can’t afford a Tesla in the first place aren’t impressed.
3.Ignores Real-World Impact
Tesla has a presence in Canada, including a factory in Markham, Ontario, working on battery technology, and a Gigafactory planned in Quebec. Jobs and economic benefits come from Tesla’s operations here. So in his attempt to “punish” Musk, he’s actually boycotting Canadian jobs.
How This is The Five Laws of Stupidity in Action
Carlo Cipolla’s “Five Laws of Stupidity” explain why self-defeating behaviour is a bigger problem than malice or ignorance. This fits right in:
1.Everyone underestimates the number of stupid people
This guy probably thinks he’s being clever. In reality, he’s just reinforcing the idea that performative activism often makes things worse.
2.Stupid people cause harm to others without benefiting themselves
He’s harming himself (losing reliable EVs, possibly losing money) and harming others (reducing demand for Tesla, discouraging investment in Canadian jobs). And for what? A moment of social media attention?
3.Stupid people are the most dangerous
Because their actions are unpredictable and irrational, people like this create more damage than outright villains. A rational opponent can be reasoned with; a stupid person who thinks they’re righteous will double down.
4.Non-stupid people underestimate the power of stupidity
People will say, “Oh, it’s just one guy, who cares?” But if enough people follow his lead, investment moves elsewhere, and jobs disappear.
5.A stupid person is someone whose actions cause harm to others while offering no benefit to themselves
Perfect match. He’s not changing Tesla’s direction, not affecting Musk’s wealth, and not improving anything for himself or society. He just looks foolish.
The Reframe
This isn’t a “boycott”; it’s self-sabotage disguised as virtue. The practical response? Ignore these people. If you like Tesla vehicles, buy one. If you don’t, get something else. But don’t let someone’s luxury beliefs and self-inflicted stupidity trick you into thinking this is a meaningful protest.
Charges dropped against teen accused in fatal Linc crash that followed high school feud | Susan Clairmont reports
👉 thespec.com/news/hamilton-…
The October 2024 crash killed a 15-year-old boy and seriously injured another passenger.
@kanyewest That’s most of Hollywood. But yo why you tripping? Just do you. Stop being so out there just to prove a point. It ain’t worth it. Fuck everyone!