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RE: Valueplan The Numbers. #1 Funded. The Rally Car. How Much Is It Costing Annually And How Are They Doing?

in LeoFinance16 days ago

Nice comment @mynewlife. I doubt anyone would like being compared to Eddie the Eagle. Haha but I get your point. My concern about selling the dream is that many other people will want that dream and apply for their own funding for their hobby. For example we can see it in Venezuela that the Street Workout crew are after copping on that they can receive easy money for example the mountain bike as well as the motorbike are now getting increased funding. I would be more for burying the dream so that we are not seen as a soft touch. We use the money not to fund dreams but to put Hive in a bigger spotlight. Using the money to launch on more exchanges seems like a goal. The Binance Futures launched help the token more than any marketing activity. What I learned from researching this post is that the driver is passionate. He posts often and he is actually competing in the races. When I look at some of the funding at conferences I see alot of people just sitting around on their phones and then a giant banquet in the evening. At least you know the two lads are trying to climb the rankings even though the cost is enormous. Maybe with this Ford Rally car , the cost of the car is in last years payouts so the payments will be less this year but we are still talking north of 100k to fund 5 races.

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I’m talking about a dream that is carefully pursued! The truth is, without Hive, he would never have had the opportunity to compete at this level, and I feel like that part of the story is often missed. When I tell people about it, they always connect with the story—they see it, and they understand the power of blockchain. If we could integrate this narrative into our blogging, showing how doing what you love and sharing content can help you follow your dream (not necessarily make you rich), then it would be perfect.

It’s one thing to fund someone's hobby or a sport that lacks future potential, but it's entirely different when it’s about an actual dream—something visible and achievable. The story of one (like Slaven) is the story of a dream made real, a success. The story of many (like the bars) is often just a playground for some, but at the expense of others.

Got it! Here's a refined version of that thought, with the context about Eddie the Eagle:

By the way, Eddie the Eagle did something truly remarkable - he jumped from a ski hill, an achievement that most people thought was impossible for someone without a traditional background in ski jumping.