When organizations get caught in endless optimism, they're basically running blind. Projects ignore early warning signs, dismiss concerns from community members, and suddenly stakeholders wake up to realize trust has already eroded. Excessive cheerleading without honest risk assessment? That's how good intentions turn into governance failures. Real strength comes from acknowledging what could go wrong—not pretending everything's perfect.
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BearMarketLightning
· 01-01 13:59
Anyway, I've never seen a project that dares to admit defeat first; it's always the fans who run away first.
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DataBartender
· 2025-12-29 23:25
To be honest, this is a common problem for most projects—only waking up after the issue has escalated.
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SurvivorshipBias
· 2025-12-29 23:15
Too realistic, mindless optimism is collective cheating.
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PumpBeforeRug
· 2025-12-29 23:00
Exactly right, that's why so many projects ultimately rug pulled.
When organizations get caught in endless optimism, they're basically running blind. Projects ignore early warning signs, dismiss concerns from community members, and suddenly stakeholders wake up to realize trust has already eroded. Excessive cheerleading without honest risk assessment? That's how good intentions turn into governance failures. Real strength comes from acknowledging what could go wrong—not pretending everything's perfect.