How Fragile The Rats That Race
The corporate world is a fragile, high-risk illusion disguised as stability.
You think your job is safe because it comes with a fixed salary, benefits, and a neatly outlined career trajectory. But security isn’t what you have—it’s what you’ve been sold. The truth? You are one email away from redundancy, one downturn away from irrelevance. A corporate asset, not a stakeholder. Owned, not an owner.
And when the layoffs come, they’re surgical. Cold. Indifferent. No warning. No negotiation. Just a name on a list. A meeting with HR. A cardboard box.
It doesn’t matter how many late nights you pulled, how many weekends you sacrificed, how many years you gave. Decades of loyalty are erased in a moment—with a severance package that barely buys time. The same people who once praised you won’t even look you in the eye.
No one is indispensable. Not you. Not anyone.
Yet, people stay—trapped by fear, inertia, and the illusion of safety. They watch their colleagues quietly packing their desks, hear whispers of “restructuring,” see their industry shrinking around them—and still, they believe it won’t happen to them.
They cling to titles, paychecks, pensions—as if these will shield them from the inevitable.
But here’s the truth: The real risk isn’t leaving. The real risk is staying.
The only way to be safe is to stop being dependent. Ownership beats employment. Leverage beats labour. Optionality beats obedience.
And that’s why MLM—specifically Shuang Hor—isn’t just another option; it’s an escape hatch.
In a world where power belongs to those who own assets—why would you choose to be one? MLM flips the equation:
You build, you earn. You scale, you win. You create, you control.
This isn’t about sales. It’s about sovereignty.
Your income should never be at the mercy of a system designed to keep you replaceable. But the longer you wait, the tighter the chains. And as time passes, age brings new battles: health, obligations, diminishing options.
So, ask yourself: Would you rather bet on yourself—or keep gambling on a system that has proven, time and time again, that you are disposable?
Because at some point, the system will fail you. The only question is—
Will you be ready? Or will you be next?
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