An anonymous site visitor recently submitted the following comment:
"Amway is one of my favourite companies. I'm not sure why people have to be so negative about it. Despite the fact that I do not harm or steal from others, I am able to make money. I'm not a millionaire yet, but I'm working toward it. It's referred to as "millionaire mentality." With a penny attitude, Joecool, you will never succeed."
Commentary by Joecool:
The majority of diamonds do not have a millionaire mindset. When I look at how they squander money and flaunt their status, I see people who could win the lotto and still be broke. They may make a good living (even if it is through deception and lying), yet they spend it all, if not more, by displaying the diamond lifestyle. The diamond lifestyle, as depicted in films like "dreamnight," is not sustainable, in my opinion. As a result, we're seeing evidence of this, such as a triple diamond in bankruptcy proceedings and gems losing their homes to foreclosure. Diamonds are selling their palaces in record numbers. Sure, they may be downsizing or selling their assets, but why sell these residences in a terrible real estate market if they were paid in cash, as they claim? Why not hold off for a few years?
I've written some articles in the past about the attributes and characteristics of millionaires. Many of these articles emphasise the importance of saving, investing, and living within your means. Many wealthy people live in the suburbs and drive ordinary cars. They don't have porsches or jaguars too often. And, for the record, when you include in company expenditures and taxes, the average diamond income, according to Amway, isn't all that much. Why do diamonds attempt to flaunt their wealth?
Diamonds, I suppose, are used to display affluence in order to attract recruits. Because the Amway opportunity has such a high turnover rate, no one can fairly expect to be able to "walk away" from their business and continue to make money. In a couple of days or weeks, attrition would decimate your company. It is for this reason that I believe diamonds do not abandon their enterprises because they cannot afford to. If you don't pay care to the business, it will crumble faster than the cookies.
Most IBOs are just duped into believing that they are cultivating a millionaire mindset. A genuine query for IBOs. How do you know whether your diamond's upline is a millionaire? Even a poor man can put on a good outfit and display photographs of mansions and sports automobiles. How can you determine if your upline diamond is currently qualified as a diamond, for that matter? Except for new pins, Amway does not divulge this information.
Diamonds' displays of excessive wealth and luxury, in my opinion, portray something, but it isn't the billionaire mentality.
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