Join over 3,000 men becoming life winners with ThePowerMoves.com.
Lucio Buffalmano is a sociologist and a world expert on power dynamics, strategies, and men's self-development.
In 2016, Lucio founded ThePowerMoves.com to help good men empower themselves, achieve their goals, and win at life.
Today, it’s the world's most popular website on power and strategies.
https://thepowermoves.com/
Lucio Buffalmano is a sociologist and a world expert on power dynamics, strategies, and men's self-development.
In 2016, Lucio founded ThePowerMoves.com to help good men empower themselves, achieve their goals, and win at life.
Today, it’s the world's most popular website on power and strategies.
https://thepowermoves.com/
Category
📚
LearningTranscript
00:00Hello friends, good to see you. Today we are going to review the book Too Much and Never Enough.
00:05It's written by the niece of Donald Trump and it talks about the dynamics, the toxic dynamics in large part of the Trump family.
00:13And it tells us a lot also about Donald Trump. I'm going to publish this during the election, so it's highly relevant to this period.
00:20But in general, even after the election, there is a lot to learn from these dynamics and from the Trump family as well.
00:26Just as a reminder, on DeepPowerMoves.com we boast the largest selection of scientific textbooks, summaries and reviews in the world.
00:36And we also have one of the largest collection of free books, summaries and reviews in the world.
00:41So let's start this one with a quick review of the author, Mary Leah Trump, or Leah Trump, however you pronounce it, I'm not sure.
00:49She is the niece of Donald Trump. She is the daughter of Donald Trump's older brother, and she holds a PhD in clinical psychology.
00:57So she's not a novice when it comes to assessing personalities, characters, possible flaws, etc., etc.
01:04So this is an important information. So Donald Trump had a sociopathic father.
01:09Looking at Donald Trump, I'm not surprised. Jokes aside, she describes the dynamic.
01:16She describes a little bit the upbringing of her father. And in general, she ascribes a lot of Donald Trump issues and personality traits, flaws and characteristics to her father and to the nurturing of her father.
01:30I don't agree so much. We'll see later why. We'll see later why.
01:34She says Fred raised children to carry a legacy of the family, not out of love.
01:39The children, especially the older child, was there because Fred wanted his son to take over his business, the mission, the name, and carry forward in the future generation.
01:50I don't doubt this is true. This is very common for men in general, even more common for right-wing men, and also relatively common among dark-haired men.
01:58And there is a video example. Donald Trump had the same towards his children.
02:04This is the first wife of Donald Trump. And she says he was not able to speak with the children.
02:09He was only able to speak to them when they got their degree. And then when he was able to talk about business with them, he could relate.
02:17When they were kids, he was absent. He was an absent father. I don't doubt this is true.
02:22I don't even think this is particularly wrong, to be honest.
02:26I think most driven men who are very driven toward their mission, very ambitious, you only have 24 hours in the day.
02:33You either are the perfect father doing picnics, spending the most quality time possible.
02:38That would be super nice. That is super nice. Or you do your business.
02:44One comes at the expense of the other. So anytime you have a very, very successful, super ambitious man, chances are low that he's going to be the greatest father on earth.
02:55That's how it goes. The way I see it, it's not necessarily toxic, in my opinion, especially because even if you do 90 percent business, but 10 percent great quality time,
03:05I think you can combine both. And in general, mothers are more important.
03:09This will be a contentious statement, but it's my take on it.
03:13This is more telling, in my opinion. Fred, Donald's father, raised Donald with a zero sum mindset of win and lose,
03:22such as you can either win and the other lose or you lose.
03:26There is no win win. I quote very quickly. Monetary value was human value for Fred.
03:32If he gave something to someone else, that person will be worth more and he less.
03:39This is the win lose mindset. Do not give. Otherwise, others are better off and you lose.
03:45He would pass that attitude to Donald in spades. I agree with this.
03:50Trump is more than just a narcissist. She says, I have no problem calling Donald Trump a narcissist.
03:55He meets all the nine criteria. But the label gets us only so far.
04:00Now, remember, she's a clinician and for psychology practitioners, there is the Goldwater rule,
04:06which roughly says you should not assess people outside of your laboratory and outside of sanctioned criteria.
04:16So she's very careful not to say too much. But in the end, she says it.
04:20And later, she also says he also meets the criteria for antisocial personality disorder, which you will call it sociopathy.
04:29And she goes on to list more traits. Some of them are a bit of a stretch, in my opinion,
04:33but I absolutely have no doubt in labeling Donald a narcissist.
04:38I also agree that he's probably more the least dark narcissist. He has some traits of sociopathy.
04:45I also agree, etc., etc. And then she talks about how Donald reacted during the pandemic when people were dying.
04:55She says the deafening silence in response to such a blatant display of sociopathic disregard for human life.
05:02I agree. That was very telling. And in my opinion, Donald Trump always uses this word disgrace.
05:09She's a disgrace. I think that leadership was disgraceful. And a guy like that cannot lead a country, in my opinion.
05:17He can lead a business. He may be good at it. I'm not saying Trump is good. I don't even think Trump is that great.
05:22She says the same. But a CEO can be very successful while being narcissistic.
05:28But in the private sphere for a company, better not to lead a country. A country president should not be a total narcissist.
05:37OK, people say that most countries presidents are narcissists. Otherwise, they will not seek that spot and that spotlight.
05:44And I agree. However, things go on a spectrum. Donald Trump, if the spectrum is here, Donald Trump is right on the edge or past the edge.
05:53So there is that. Then she goes on to say Donald Trump has no empathy. I agree. Goes along with the diagnosis.
06:02And she gives several examples from her life. So this is why I enjoy this book so much, because, you know, she got the real life examples to back it up.
06:11And anecdotes, they're all interesting. She talks about when Fred Trump, the father of Donald Trump, then started becoming demented.
06:20It was not dementia, something else. But anyway, started losing his mental power faculties.
06:25And she said Donald Trump treated him with contempt. It's sad to hear, but I think it's plausible, if not likely.
06:36Donald Trump need for affirmation is endless. We know that comes with narcissism. Only blind phoners do not see that.
06:44Donald Trump used to be somewhat kinder. I like this because it suggests that she was not just piling on on Trump.
06:52But she could also recognize something good, not too much. I could see some bias from the author against Trump.
06:59We'll see that later. But, you know, it's not 100 percent against Trump. So she talks when sometimes he helped.
07:06And she says Trump was the only one to keep her in the loop in the family.
07:10But she also say that with time he got worse, which I also believe is true, because especially people who reach a power position,
07:17they do not get better with time. They tend to get worse, which is also why I think Trump is a danger to democracy.
07:23Some people say it would be too old to do anything. I think that's more of a reason why you do not want him in the presidency,
07:32rather than the reason why you do want him there. The older someone gets with the power, the more strongly tries to hold on to it.
07:40We have seen it over and over also in history and various despots.
07:45Donald's psychology makes him a poor leader in crisis. I couldn't agree more.
07:49She gives several example of how he withheld ventilators from governors who mistreated him or with whom he had some issues.
07:58I have no doubt this is completely true. This goes with logic.
08:04Once you understand the blocks of how psychology works, how people work, you don't even need to go all over the facts.
08:12Just the logic makes sense. This is how Donald Trump would behave. I have no qualms that this is plausible, if not likely.
08:22About the civil unrest, this is very telling and there is a lot to learn here, in my opinion.
08:28She says he also showed poor leadership during the various civil unrest.
08:34This is another crisis in which it would have been so easy for Donald to triumph.
08:40I agree. When you're a great character, a great person, and you're in a leadership position, crisis may sound mean to say,
08:48but they are an opportunity because it's during the crisis that the best people come to the fore.
08:54All your good qualities show the strongest during crisis.
08:58And the opposite is also true. When you have a shitty character, when you are not a good leader, then crisis make it even worse.
09:08So she says an effective response would entail the call for unity.
09:14100% would have been so simple. But Donald required division and that's exactly what it did.
09:20And this is also another reason why he is a poor leader.
09:24Another reason why he makes for a poor leader, together with all the other narcissists, is that,
09:34especially when the narcissism is very high on the scale, they cannot deal with bad news,
09:40because for them bad news is bad to their ego.
09:44If during their presidency anything bad happens, then it's a stain on them. They cannot cope with that.
09:54That's why Donald Trump could not cope with any problem.
09:58When the COVID cases started spiking, he had to hide them. He had to say it will all go over during the summer.
10:04You can quickly fix it by injecting alcohol in your lungs and all that bullshit.
10:08That's because, for him, the crisis meant that his presidency will not be the best ever that the world has ever seen, etc.
10:18A guy like this cannot make for a good president. It's a given.
10:24To me it's not even about political bias. I might be more conservative in many areas, including economy, borders, immigration.
10:32I totally agree that the left has gone way too far in a lot of nonsense BS, including the author here, as we shall see.
10:40But that Trump and a character like him does not make for a good president and leader, to me it's a statement of fact.
10:46Anyway, some more interesting anecdotes.
10:50Trump tried to steal the inheritance money from the family. He tried to amend the father's will.
10:56But the father, Fred, found out. He refused to sign and she says that the whole family would have been screwed.
11:02But what I was even more shocked to read was that after that the family still kept meeting and pretending everything was okay.
11:10Which tells you a little bit about the dynamics of the family.
11:14Trump is not a good businessman. It's all a pretense. I think here we start to see a little bit of the bias.
11:20I agree that most people probably believe that he is a much better businessman than he actually is.
11:25And that's in part because Trump is so good.
11:29Actually, he's not so good. It's just that people are too naive to see the red flags.
11:34So Donald Trump is a huge salesman, is an absolute braggart.
11:39He knows how to take any chance to show 110% more than what is done.
11:45And the media went along with it. And a lot of people who cannot spot the red flags, then they tended to bleed with it.
11:51But in a way, you could see he was effective. Yes, for the average of people.
11:55Remember, people are on a bell curve. How can I say without sounding a dick?
12:00The smart people are a minority. We are a minority, guys.
12:04So Trump was effective at portraying that image on the bulk of the bell curve, let's say.
12:13The real reason Donald's first two projects were acquired was because of his father.
12:18Yeah, I do believe it played a role.
12:21Then she talks about how Fred Trump, Donald's father, lent him a lot of money, hundreds of millions,
12:29which this was then checked on data and facts.
12:34So I believe it's all true.
12:38Remember, Trump said he got one million from his father.
12:41So that's also very telling.
12:44On the other hand, I don't think he's as bad as the author tries to portray.
12:50So his problem was that he piled up too much on that. He was overly optimistic.
12:55But eventually he found a way, she says, because the bank then needed him to survive.
13:02So they kept lending. They provided a lifeline.
13:05And importantly, they provided Trump enough money so that he could pretend that he was a genius businessman.
13:13Basically, they paid him to go around in limousines and play the smart, super rich, self-made billionaire, which it's plausible.
13:23It would be in the bank interest to keep up the charade.
13:27The media is to blame for a common success.
13:30You say that in the beginning they give him a platform because Trump attracts audience.
13:34That's what he's good at. That's what he's really good at.
13:38They bought the lie of the self-made man, in part because it was good for them and in part because they failed to do the background checks.
13:45When he started running, they treated him like a serious candidate and they never challenged him.
13:51And she says that even when he started talking BS, the media failed to challenge him.
13:57I partly agree. And I think today, in part, it's true that a good chunk of the media overly criticizes him, even for what should not be criticized.
14:07But in my opinion, they fail to criticize him enough for what should be criticized.
14:12In my opinion, the main risk is that he's a risk to democracy.
14:16He has a despotic and tyrant leaning.
14:20And and what we said before, that he's a narcissist, that he's a narcissist and narcissists.
14:27I always mix the plural in my names, guys.
14:30It's my WAP background talking about backgrounds.
14:35And they fail to disclose and to truly share with the vast majority of people to let them understand that narcissists make for a terrible leader.
14:46Trump sacrifices truth for a good story. Of course, if you don't know that, yeah, wake up.
14:54But what's interesting about the book is that she has the story to share and they are all funny and entertaining.
15:02So she was talking about the the author and, you know, Trump wanted to show that he rescued her and to make the story even better for more impact and better for him.
15:13Of course, he started saying, oh, she dropped out. She was a man. She started doing drugs.
15:18But the author never never did drugs. So she had to deny it. No, no, I've never done drugs.
15:24He was embellishing the story for a fact. And he knew I knew it.
15:28She was a total disaster, he said. Typical Trump.
15:33And then the analysis she gives, he concocted a better story that somehow had him playing the role of my savior.
15:41That's the game, right? Make the story more impactful. People listen more.
15:46And if you can be the savior in that story so that people admire you and think better of you, that's Trump's game.
15:54There is no strategy in Trump. His ego only drives him. I also agree here.
15:58I will say, though, that Trump has great power instinct, a super dominant man.
16:04He has given me so many examples for how gaslighting and manipulation works and for how dominance work, including will lose dominance.
16:12He's got those instincts. He can't deny that. But I also agree that he's bad at planning for the simple reason that his ego is too big.
16:20I don't think he's very smart. He relies on instincts.
16:23But when it comes to planning, he lacks. And his problem is that his huge ego is huge.
16:29Narcissistic ego cannot conceive of him following other people's plan.
16:34And we saw that. I share here an example in the presidential debate where he was unprepared and she ate his lunch.
16:43This is also very telling and a huge lesson learned for us.
16:48Psychophants to dark triad are used and thrown away. We have said that many, many times on The Power Moves.
16:54And she confirms that. We have more examples.
16:57Donald Trump will never be seen with his followers. And I love this because it's so true.
17:02This is one of the reasons why on The Power Moves in general, we say do not be a fan of anybody, especially not of narcissists.
17:09Look, sometimes you want to tie yourself to a uber successful narcissist because he can give you a lift up.
17:16But you always have to be careful because they will set you up as this scapegoat.
17:21Yes, scapegoat. And then they will throw you away.
17:24It happened to Rudolph Giuliani and a lot of guys.
17:27Roy Cohen was his name. And to several more guys, I don't remember. But that's the modus operandi.
17:32So these guys saw a very successful guy.
17:34Some of them also had blinkers in their eyes because they could not see the red flags.
17:39So they truly thought he was a great guy. But then eventually, what usually happens?
17:43Trump threw them away. And finally, what I agree the most, she says, if he's afforded a second term, it would be the end of American democracy.
17:54Actually, I don't 100 percent agree because she gives she gives it for granted.
17:59I do not give it for granted. As a matter of fact, I think the chances of him successfully trying.
18:05No, not trying. The odds are much higher. Him successfully overturning democracy are not so high.
18:11Not because he's a good guy, but because he may simply fail like it up.
18:16And it's not easy. Luckily, it's not easy.
18:18You know, it's not easy to overthrow a democratic regime in strong democratic Western countries.
18:25Thanks, God. However, the risk is still there.
18:28And it's much, much higher than most people think.
18:31Support our work, guys. It takes me days to do this.
18:34And it's all my time. I do not outsource this at all.
18:37So when you purchase something, if you click your first, we'll get like a little chunk of it and no extra cost to you.
18:43And I have to say, a lot of people have done it because I've seen some people buying avocado and they kind of sell.
18:48So thank you so much from the bottom of my heart.
18:52More is wisdom. Trump paid to pass his test.
18:54She didn't have any reliable evidence here, but again, it's plausible, even likely for me.
19:02And let's go now. Probably. OK, this was interesting.
19:07She says Ivana was arrogant, but Marla was nice. I agree.
19:11That's exactly what I thought just by looking at these people.
19:14I think the great advantage of becoming one of the greatest advantages of becoming power where is that you can read character much faster than most people can.
19:23When I saw Marla, I thought she seems like a good woman.
19:26Ivana, you get the point. Quote, this was very telling, in my opinion.
19:34So her father became an alcoholic, Freddy, Fred's first father and Donald's brother.
19:40And he went to his father and he said, I need to beat this dad.
19:46I don't think I can do it by myself. I know I can't.
19:49He was talking about getting over alcoholism. And she says, instead of asking, what can I do for you?
19:57Fred said, what do you want from me? That tells you a lot.
20:02And this quote, I think, was funny. Also tells you a lot about Trump.
20:07So she was with us. She was visiting her mother. Trump visited, too.
20:11And the mother said, oh, you know, Mary has been visiting me every day.
20:19Trump turned to her, to the author and say, must be nice to have so much free time.
20:25What a fucking asshole.
20:28Criticism. This has been going on for 20 minutes already.
20:32Please, guys, tell me if these are too long. It's only my second time.
20:36So I appreciate the feedback. All right.
20:38Unconvincing psychological analysis. As I said in the beginning, in my opinion,
20:43she ascribes too much to culture and nurturing rather than genes.
20:49In my opinion, yes, of course, nurture and culture mother.
20:54However, it's simpler when you have an asshole dark triad.
20:58They also tend to make dark triad asshole children.
21:03And that's how you explain Donald Trump. Because if it's look, it's simple.
21:08If it were, as she says, then her father should have been the same as Trump,
21:14even more because Fred wanted his first child to be his heir.
21:20But he wasn't. It was the opposite. Why? Because he was born different.
21:24This also I disagreed with. I think this is very common among some pop,
21:30pop psychologists and left leaning. Whenever they see somebody very dominant,
21:35very powerful, they say, oh, he's overcompensating because he's got low self-esteem.
21:40Sometimes this is the case, especially with vulnerable narcissism.
21:45But it's not always the case. I also had an ex-girlfriend.
21:48Every time somebody drove with a cool car, especially a red Ferrari, small dick.
21:55You know, some people are winners in life. They are not all overcompensating.
22:00You know, in the case of Trump, I think he may be a little bit of overcompensation
22:06because he's got some vulnerable narcissism. Vulnerable narcissism is more associated
22:11with overcompensation than grandiose. But Trump is also grandiose.
22:15And funnily enough, Chad GPT, I asked, he also agreed that is a mix of the two.
22:20So, you know, let's not over rely on that. But me plus Chad GPT, it's a it's a good source.
22:30What I thought was interesting to me, the author seemed a lot like women's psychology,
22:36such as a little bit less evidence based and more opinion. And I give some examples here.
22:44And also very telling, in my opinion, this one here.
22:48She criticizes Trump and sometimes it feels like she says he has been a failure.
22:53But come on, look at reality. I quote, Fred perverted his son's perception of the world
23:00and damaged his ability to live in it. So Trump is damaged to live in the world.
23:06Hey, last time I checked, he's a billionaire dating models, has got beautiful children.
23:12He live in luxury. He lives in luxury. He's become the president of the United States.
23:18Hey, it doesn't seem like his ability to live in the world has been damaged.
23:24What she meant is his empathy, his ability to relate empathically with other human beings,
23:30in which case I would agree. But, you know, you've got to be more specific.
23:33You cannot say of a guy like Trump that he cannot live in the world successfully because he can.
23:41And, you know, both matter. Empathetically bonding with other people is important,
23:48but also material success is important.
23:50Look, the author has written this book, was super successful.
23:53Then she has written a follow up and then she has written a third one.
23:56Why? Let's be honest, because she wanted to get some money out of these books.
24:01So she also appreciates material success.
24:04And I'm not saying that in the sense that she should not or in any mean way.
24:08I'm saying that it's important and everybody lives according to also chasing material success.
24:18So, you know, let's not ignore it. Let's not ignore the fact that Trump has been a huge success in life.
24:24Right. Also, because it undermines your criticism of the guy.
24:28You've got to be realistic when criticizing people.
24:31Otherwise you even lose credibility. And, you know, I don't stand for that because it's not true.
24:38Doesn't give Trump enough credit. As I said before, there are other examples.
24:43So personal bias shows, in my opinion, she aggrandizes his father's success, but minimizes others.
24:49She says none of Fred's other children would accomplish so much entirely on their own.
24:56I'm going to skip this because I don't want to because I don't want to be mean.
25:00But, you know, the comparison is stark. Denies Donald may have been better in business.
25:07She says there is no evidence to suggest that my father lacked the skills to run Trump management.
25:13Come on. Are you telling me now that Fred picked Donald no matter the skills on the job?
25:25I don't buy it. You said yourself that she preferred her first child to be the main heir.
25:31If she skipped the first child and went for Donald, maybe he saw something in Donald.
25:37Now, you may say that Donald was better because he was more similar to his father,
25:43was a son of a bitch and would rather steal money and do not make repairs in their homes
25:51and instead cut every possible corner. And that I would believe.
25:56And still, maybe it's also a question of skills.
26:00Later in the book, she also gives an example of her father doing a dumb move,
26:05which lends credibility to what I'm saying.
26:09Also, in my opinion, overblames Donald and Fred for his father's demise.
26:14She says the only self-made in the family, Freddie, was being slowly and exonerably dismantled.
26:20Come on, man. You've got to take some responsibility for individual not success.
26:25Let's say I do agree with you. The father was a son of a bitch.
26:28He weighed heavily on his father's alcoholism.
26:35But he had, he shouldered some responsibility, at least maybe.
26:43And it's never your father's fault. Again, my dad's dream of flying had been taken away.
26:50And by not seeing his children, because he divorced, he lost his birthright.
26:56It's not a fucking birthright to see your children if you're not a good father, number one.
27:01The dream of flying was not taken away. He became an alcoholic. He drank it away.
27:05And I am sorry to say this so blatantly, but, you know, like, take some ownership.
27:14Glosses over father's huge red flags. She was a child.
27:19She walked into her father and mother room and she saw the father with a gun raised to her mother's face.
27:28He was laughing. Do you want to tell me he was a great guy?
27:36And I'm taking pauses because it's difficult for me to say in case she were to listen to this.
27:41It's painful to hear to a review like this. Right. And OK, he was super drunk.
27:46So there are important justifications and some excuses one could give.
27:52But, you know, come on. He had some red flags.
27:57There are some things that suggest he was not a great guy while Trump was the super mean guy. Right.
28:06And this was also very telling in my opinion. Despite my mother's fears of snakes, dad brought home a bald python.
28:15Who the fuck does that? Look, I am not in long term relationships because I am extremely freedom loving.
28:24But if I were to be in one, even if I liked snakes, just out of respect, don't put one in your house if your long term partner is afraid of it.
28:34Just so basic respect manner or find a way where it doesn't damage her, which doesn't sound it's what he's done.
28:44Because listen to this. Put it put the tank into the den, forcing my mother to pass by it any time she needed to do laundry,
28:54go into my brother's room or leave the apartment. So she was forced to see it.
28:58You like this snake so much, hide it in a room where she cannot see it. Something like that.
29:04You know, like I read this and then like my father was so good and they killed my poor father.
29:10You know, political bias shows as well. She called the border wall a vanity project.
29:19Come on, it's not a vanity project.
29:22We could argue whether or not you could spend the money more effectively for the good of the United States or for the world in general.
29:30But even just focusing on the United States, fair enough, maybe you can make a good argument.
29:35You can spend the money better, but it's not a vanity project.
29:38In my opinion, there was too much immigration in the United States.
29:42There has been too much in Europe as well. So, yeah, there you can see the political side of it. Right.
29:49Talking about Trump victory, she says the victory was suspected worst illegitimate.
29:57How do you pronounce that? Well, illegitimate. I don't think it was illegitimate.
30:03And she writing this also tells you a little bit.
30:08Oh, and, you know, sometimes I felt she exaggerates.
30:13Daily corruptions have led to the impending collapse of this once great nation economy.
30:18The United States has never been doing better. If you look at the GDP, it left every other country in the dust.
30:26And then this one, in my opinion, just felt not true.
30:31Talking about, you know, the famous event where the cop had the knee over the black guy and then died.
30:37She says Donald wishes it had been his knee on Floyd's neck.
30:41No fucking way. He didn't wish that. He's a son of a bitch.
30:46Donald Trump is a narcissist. He didn't wish that.
30:51And look, it's even logic. Trump wants good publicity because he wants to be the best president ever.
30:58So, you know, the reason why he will not want that is because that's negative publicity.
31:03You don't need to give Trump much empathy to know that this is nonsense.
31:09Plus, I disagree with the morality. I think she has this angle where she feels like because the family was rich,
31:18then they were supposed to give more to help her mother. Many people would agree with this.
31:24I don't necessarily agree just because somebody in your family is wealthier doesn't mean they need to give it to you.
31:29I'm a strong believer that people need to deserve their help as well and move their asses.
31:34Just giving, in my opinion, is unethical. Actually, you should not give to people who do not deserve.
31:40It's unethical and it's a waste of resources that can be put to better use for humanity.
31:46Again, help people when it's necessary, but don't throw money at them just because you have them.
31:56In the end, it was even more surprising to me that of all the bad things Trump has done,
32:03she says some of them, as we said, are true, but she justifies it.
32:08She justifies him and says it's because of his upbringing.
32:12You know, sometimes she says we can understand Donald, et cetera, et cetera.
32:16And interestingly, this is the same issue as before. It's not holding people responsible for directions.
32:22I think it's simpler. Donald Trump sometimes behaves as an asshole because he's an asshole and that's on him.
32:29We don't need to go to his upbringing, et cetera, et cetera.
32:31Anyway, overall, look, you know, I over-focus on criticism in my reviews because that's my angle,
32:38because that's how I'm probably wired, and also because that's what's missing.
32:43Most people who review books tend to review them more in the positives than in the negatives.
32:48I focus more on the negatives, over-focus on the negatives, but this was a great book.
32:53I loved it. I learned a lot. I only shared a little part of it.
32:56Absolutely, if you're interested in Trump, this is a must-have, and I hope you guys enjoyed.
33:01Please leave a like if you liked it.
33:03Man, if you stayed here until the 30 minutes mark, much respect to you.
33:09Comment, give me some feedback, and love you guys. Speak soon. Ciao, ciao.
33:18Transcribed by https://otter.ai
33:48Transcribed by https://otter.ai
34:18Transcribed by https://otter.ai