Monkey Knife Fight
Events
Starting Date: Sunday, February 23, 2025
Ending Date: None
AI and Wealth Management – On-Demand
https://truesdellwealth.com/events
Starting Date: Wednesday, March 5, 2025
Ending Date: Sunday, March 23, 2025
The Truesdell Military Portfolio – Seven Company Profile
https://truesdellwealth.com/events
Friday, March 21st, 2025 at 6:30 pm
Casual Cocktail Conversation at the Stonewater Club
In-Person – Reservations Required – Text or Call 352-612-1000
“or” use the Contact Form: https://truesdellwealth.com/events/rsvp
https://truesdellwealth.com/events
Tunnel to Towers Benefit Concert
The Truesdell Companies the primary sponsor sponsor of the Eirinn Abu benefit concert for Tunnel to Towers, on February 28th at the Circle Square arena in Ocala, Florida. XXX
Podcast Personality
Paul Grant Truesdell | Founder & CEO
J.D., AIF, CLU, ChFC, RFC
The Truesdell Companies
The Truesdell Professional Building
200 NW 52nd Avenue
Ocala, Florida 34482
212-433-2525 - Switchboard
paul@truesdell.net - General Email
Websites
truesdellwealth.com
Truesdell.net
PaulTruesdell.com
youtube.com/@truesdellwealth
Find The Paul Truesdell Podcast also at:
Apple | https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-paul-truesdell-podcast/id1586024560
Spotify | https://open.spotify.com/show/2BYDLetiMboIGRFPjIkglJ
Transistor | https://thepaultruesdellpodcast.transistor.fm/episodes
LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/paul-grant-truesdell?lipi=urn%3Ali%3Apage%3Ad_flagship3_profile_view_base_contact_details%3BUuNTfp3aQRyLPjGywquQRQ%3D%3D
Rough Notes
Monkeys with Knives: The Global Stage and the Art of Self-Destruction
Let’s talk about a concept I call *monkeys having a knife fight*. Now, I want you to picture this scene in all its deranged glory. A bunch of wild-eyed, bug-toothed, unpredictable monkeys, all armed with knives. They’re not trained fencers or disciplined warriors. No, these are lunatics who stumbled upon something sharp, and now they're about to tear each other apart.
One particularly ambitious monkey takes his knife, sticks it into a jar of peanut butter, and licks it—because, obviously, peanut butter is irresistible. The problem? He doesn’t quite understand that knives are sharp. So, after a few delightful licks, he slices his own tongue. Now he's rolling around in pain, bleeding everywhere, dropping his knife, and flailing like he’s just discovered gravity for the first time. Another monkey sees the peanut-butter-covered knife, picks it up, and—shockingly—makes the same mistake.
Meanwhile, a third monkey sees the jar of peanut butter now sitting on the ground, wide open. He doesn’t have a knife, but he sees the pattern: peanut butter + knife = deliciousness. So, he grabs the knife, dips it in, and—well, you see where this is going. Soon, one monkey accidentally stabs another, who then retaliates. More monkeys jump in. Now it’s a full-blown knife fight, complete with flying fur, shrieks of rage, and absolute chaos.
And here’s the kicker: they could have just used their fingers. But no. They had knives, and knives mean power, right? Eventually, they wipe themselves out. The females are gone, the babies are abandoned, and the few remaining monkeys are just hacking at each other for sport. Congratulations, they’ve achieved total annihilation over peanut butter and poor decision-making.
The Global Peanut Butter Jar of Doom
Now, take this monkey scenario and apply it to the real world. Because, let’s be honest, we’re watching a geopolitical knife fight unfold on a global scale. People argue over the most ridiculous things—loudly, emotionally, and without a shred of logic.
Look at the endless debates about Trump, Zelensky, NATO, Ukraine, Russia—pick your controversy. You’ve got people on every side of the argument treating it like life or death, when, in reality, they’re just monkeys with knives, slashing at each other over something they don’t fully understand.
One day, Trump is a reckless lunatic about to burn the world down. The next day, the same people screaming about him are suddenly nodding along when another leader does the same thing. Oh, Zelensky went to the UK and got told by the Prime Minister that peace only comes through the U.S.? Well, isn’t that an interesting little revelation? And yet, people still act like Trump is the singular source of chaos in the world.
And what’s he actually doing? Well, if you step back and think about it, he’s essentially standing outside the monkey pit, watching the knife fight, and saying, *Yeah, we’re not getting involved in that mess*.
But What About the Big Guns?
Now, let’s say you’re standing there, watching this disaster unfold. You’ve got a big gun. You could stop the monkeys with a few well-placed shots. You could take their knives away. You could, theoretically, prevent them from wiping themselves out.
That’s what power looks like. The U.S. is the gun in this scenario. The monkeys—well, let’s not name names, but you get the idea—are fighting over their peanut butter and stabbing each other senselessly. And yet, for some reason, we’re supposed to believe that our best course of action is to jump in and start fighting at their level?
That’s the real problem. You don’t get into a knife fight with monkeys. You don’t get into a mud-wrestling match with a hog. Why? Because the hog loves the mud, and even if you win, you’re still covered in filth. That’s what’s happening on the world stage. We keep getting pulled into fights that have no upside, just because someone, somewhere, thinks we should.
A Pyrrhic Victory at Best
And let’s talk about another fancy concept—*Pyrrhic victory*. This is where you technically "win" but at such an absurd cost that you might as well have lost.
If the U.S. jumps into every conflict, funds every war, and gets dragged into every international squabble, what’s the result? We "win" by spending trillions, sacrificing soldiers, and depleting our resources while the monkeys keep fighting. That’s not victory. That’s stupidity.
But hey, the media loves it. The talking heads love it. Because if you’re screaming about war, politics, and conflict all the time, people stay tuned in. And the more people stay tuned in, the more profitable the outrage machine becomes.
Trump, Vance, and the Art of Knowing Your Role
Trump, for all the hysteria surrounding him, knows exactly what he’s doing. He understands that if you want to get anything done, you don’t fight at the monkey level. You step back, let them wear themselves out, and when the time is right, you step in with real leverage.
And look at his team. J.D. Vance is playing the role of the political pit bull, saying things that need to be said but that Trump himself doesn’t have to say directly. Smart leaders know how to use their people strategically. You don’t send the general into every battle—you send the soldiers.
This is what effective power looks like. You set the terms. You control the narrative. You don’t let yourself get dragged into every pointless fight just because people are screaming about it.
Time to Let Zelensky Figure It Out
And speaking of people who need to figure it out—Zelensky. He’s had his time. He’s been playing the role of wartime leader, but at some point, Ukraine needs a change. If their democracy is as strong as they claim, then they need to navigate that transition. If it’s not, then all the billions we’ve thrown at them aren’t really doing much, are they?
Oh, but wait—Russia is supposedly influencing everything! Well, if Russia is that powerful, then the logic follows that they should be eliminated, right? Except no one really wants to say that out loud. So instead, we keep playing this back-and-forth game where we pretend we’re making progress while nothing actually changes.
The Bottom Line: Stop the Madness
So here we are, watching monkeys stab each other over peanut butter, convinced that somehow, if we just throw more knives into the mix, things will get better.
They won’t.
The people screaming about Trump don’t actually understand what’s happening. The media isn’t interested in solutions—just more chaos. And the reality is that the world has always been full of bad actors. Russia, China, rogue nations—they’ve always been around. The difference now is that we have a choice: Do we jump into the knife fight, or do we start making strategic decisions that actually benefit us?
I vote for the latter. Because frankly, I’m tired of watching monkeys stab each other and pretending it’s some grand geopolitical chess match.
It’s not. It’s just dumb. And we should stop acting like we have to be a part of it.
Starting Date: Sunday, February 23, 2025
Ending Date: None
AI and Wealth Management – On-Demand
https://truesdellwealth.com/events
Starting Date: Wednesday, March 5, 2025
Ending Date: Sunday, March 23, 2025
The Truesdell Military Portfolio – Seven Company Profile
https://truesdellwealth.com/events
Friday, March 21st, 2025 at 6:30 pm
Casual Cocktail Conversation at the Stonewater Club
In-Person – Reservations Required – Text or Call 352-612-1000
“or” use the Contact Form: https://truesdellwealth.com/events/rsvp
https://truesdellwealth.com/events
Tunnel to Towers Benefit Concert
The Truesdell Companies the primary sponsor sponsor of the Eirinn Abu benefit concert for Tunnel to Towers, on February 28th at the Circle Square arena in Ocala, Florida. XXX
Podcast Personality
Paul Grant Truesdell | Founder & CEO
J.D., AIF, CLU, ChFC, RFC
The Truesdell Companies
The Truesdell Professional Building
200 NW 52nd Avenue
Ocala, Florida 34482
212-433-2525 - Switchboard
paul@truesdell.net - General Email
Websites
truesdellwealth.com
Truesdell.net
PaulTruesdell.com
youtube.com/@truesdellwealth
Find The Paul Truesdell Podcast also at:
Apple | https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-paul-truesdell-podcast/id1586024560
Spotify | https://open.spotify.com/show/2BYDLetiMboIGRFPjIkglJ
Transistor | https://thepaultruesdellpodcast.transistor.fm/episodes
LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/paul-grant-truesdell?lipi=urn%3Ali%3Apage%3Ad_flagship3_profile_view_base_contact_details%3BUuNTfp3aQRyLPjGywquQRQ%3D%3D
Rough Notes
Monkeys with Knives: The Global Stage and the Art of Self-Destruction
Let’s talk about a concept I call *monkeys having a knife fight*. Now, I want you to picture this scene in all its deranged glory. A bunch of wild-eyed, bug-toothed, unpredictable monkeys, all armed with knives. They’re not trained fencers or disciplined warriors. No, these are lunatics who stumbled upon something sharp, and now they're about to tear each other apart.
One particularly ambitious monkey takes his knife, sticks it into a jar of peanut butter, and licks it—because, obviously, peanut butter is irresistible. The problem? He doesn’t quite understand that knives are sharp. So, after a few delightful licks, he slices his own tongue. Now he's rolling around in pain, bleeding everywhere, dropping his knife, and flailing like he’s just discovered gravity for the first time. Another monkey sees the peanut-butter-covered knife, picks it up, and—shockingly—makes the same mistake.
Meanwhile, a third monkey sees the jar of peanut butter now sitting on the ground, wide open. He doesn’t have a knife, but he sees the pattern: peanut butter + knife = deliciousness. So, he grabs the knife, dips it in, and—well, you see where this is going. Soon, one monkey accidentally stabs another, who then retaliates. More monkeys jump in. Now it’s a full-blown knife fight, complete with flying fur, shrieks of rage, and absolute chaos.
And here’s the kicker: they could have just used their fingers. But no. They had knives, and knives mean power, right? Eventually, they wipe themselves out. The females are gone, the babies are abandoned, and the few remaining monkeys are just hacking at each other for sport. Congratulations, they’ve achieved total annihilation over peanut butter and poor decision-making.
The Global Peanut Butter Jar of Doom
Now, take this monkey scenario and apply it to the real world. Because, let’s be honest, we’re watching a geopolitical knife fight unfold on a global scale. People argue over the most ridiculous things—loudly, emotionally, and without a shred of logic.
Look at the endless debates about Trump, Zelensky, NATO, Ukraine, Russia—pick your controversy. You’ve got people on every side of the argument treating it like life or death, when, in reality, they’re just monkeys with knives, slashing at each other over something they don’t fully understand.
One day, Trump is a reckless lunatic about to burn the world down. The next day, the same people screaming about him are suddenly nodding along when another leader does the same thing. Oh, Zelensky went to the UK and got told by the Prime Minister that peace only comes through the U.S.? Well, isn’t that an interesting little revelation? And yet, people still act like Trump is the singular source of chaos in the world.
And what’s he actually doing? Well, if you step back and think about it, he’s essentially standing outside the monkey pit, watching the knife fight, and saying, *Yeah, we’re not getting involved in that mess*.
But What About the Big Guns?
Now, let’s say you’re standing there, watching this disaster unfold. You’ve got a big gun. You could stop the monkeys with a few well-placed shots. You could take their knives away. You could, theoretically, prevent them from wiping themselves out.
That’s what power looks like. The U.S. is the gun in this scenario. The monkeys—well, let’s not name names, but you get the idea—are fighting over their peanut butter and stabbing each other senselessly. And yet, for some reason, we’re supposed to believe that our best course of action is to jump in and start fighting at their level?
That’s the real problem. You don’t get into a knife fight with monkeys. You don’t get into a mud-wrestling match with a hog. Why? Because the hog loves the mud, and even if you win, you’re still covered in filth. That’s what’s happening on the world stage. We keep getting pulled into fights that have no upside, just because someone, somewhere, thinks we should.
A Pyrrhic Victory at Best
And let’s talk about another fancy concept—*Pyrrhic victory*. This is where you technically "win" but at such an absurd cost that you might as well have lost.
If the U.S. jumps into every conflict, funds every war, and gets dragged into every international squabble, what’s the result? We "win" by spending trillions, sacrificing soldiers, and depleting our resources while the monkeys keep fighting. That’s not victory. That’s stupidity.
But hey, the media loves it. The talking heads love it. Because if you’re screaming about war, politics, and conflict all the time, people stay tuned in. And the more people stay tuned in, the more profitable the outrage machine becomes.
Trump, Vance, and the Art of Knowing Your Role
Trump, for all the hysteria surrounding him, knows exactly what he’s doing. He understands that if you want to get anything done, you don’t fight at the monkey level. You step back, let them wear themselves out, and when the time is right, you step in with real leverage.
And look at his team. J.D. Vance is playing the role of the political pit bull, saying things that need to be said but that Trump himself doesn’t have to say directly. Smart leaders know how to use their people strategically. You don’t send the general into every battle—you send the soldiers.
This is what effective power looks like. You set the terms. You control the narrative. You don’t let yourself get dragged into every pointless fight just because people are screaming about it.
Time to Let Zelensky Figure It Out
And speaking of people who need to figure it out—Zelensky. He’s had his time. He’s been playing the role of wartime leader, but at some point, Ukraine needs a change. If their democracy is as strong as they claim, then they need to navigate that transition. If it’s not, then all the billions we’ve thrown at them aren’t really doing much, are they?
Oh, but wait—Russia is supposedly influencing everything! Well, if Russia is that powerful, then the logic follows that they should be eliminated, right? Except no one really wants to say that out loud. So instead, we keep playing this back-and-forth game where we pretend we’re making progress while nothing actually changes.
The Bottom Line: Stop the Madness
So here we are, watching monkeys stab each other over peanut butter, convinced that somehow, if we just throw more knives into the mix, things will get better.
They won’t.
The people screaming about Trump don’t actually understand what’s happening. The media isn’t interested in solutions—just more chaos. And the reality is that the world has always been full of bad actors. Russia, China, rogue nations—they’ve always been around. The difference now is that we have a choice: Do we jump into the knife fight, or do we start making strategic decisions that actually benefit us?
I vote for the latter. Because frankly, I’m tired of watching monkeys stab each other and pretending it’s some grand geopolitical chess match.
It’s not. It’s just dumb. And we should stop acting like we have to be a part of it.