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@ Ferenc Kovács
2025-05-24 10:00:03
💡 The age of great opportunities hasn’t ended — it just looks different now.
Daniel Priestley shared a thought on Tom Bilyeu’s podcast that really stuck with me:
👉 “For previous generations, real estate was the big opportunity. You bought a home, inflation took care of the debt, and the value remained — or grew.”
Today, that opportunity isn’t in property — it’s in something entirely different.
👉 “This generation holds the world in its hands: you can build global connections, learn anything, start a business — and all the digital tools once reserved for big companies are now accessible to anyone.”
That really resonated with me.
So often, we focus on what we don’t have. But maybe it’s time we looked at what we do have — and what we’re willing to do with it.
🌍 The internet, AI-driven tools, automation, global reach — these aren’t just buzzwords. They’re real, powerful resources. And it’s not about having all the technical skills. It’s about your mindset and drive.
🎧 I genuinely recommend watching the full conversation — it’s full of eye-opening ideas:
https://youtu.be/5NlHIycmj7Y
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📌 What else do they talk about in the interview?
– Why younger generations are so frustrated with the economy
The old rules no longer apply, but no one told them what the new game looks like.
– How technology is creating a huge gap between winners and the rest
Those who leverage tech aren’t necessarily smarter — they’re just using different tools.
– The difference between capital and finance
Capital used to come from past savings. Today’s economy runs on borrowing from the future.
– Why “just tax the rich” doesn’t work in practice
Wealth is mobile, complex, and hard to pin down — and redistribution often creates more problems than it solves.
– What real solutions might look like
Reintroducing fair competition. Today’s monopolies are built on ecosystems, not just size — and those need to be broken up strategically.
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In the end, the question isn’t what we’re missing — it’s what we already have, and what we’re willing to do with it.
What do you think — is there a “real estate-sized” opportunity hidden in plain sight today?