Quote from Brandonf:
I think that everyone could agree that if Don was hiring people to trade his own money he would be much more selective then in allowing someone to come on board with their own capital (w/ leverage provided by Bright). That is a moot point though since that is not what Don is offering here.
Since what Don is offering is the opportunity to start a business for yourself, I don't see why he needs to test people. If you have the money to open a restaurant the odds are 90% that you will fail, just like trading. However, when you go to the local meat locker to line up steak, to the power company to get the lights turned on and any other vendor you have to interact with as the owner of a restaurant they don't require you to "profile" correctly before they will interact with you, and they have no moral obligation to do so.
Brandon
Imagine a school opens up in Vegas that teaches people the profession of gambling.
Do you think parents would want their children to skip grad school in favor of that?
Do you think such a school could get accreditation from a reputable accreditation review board?
Don is offering an "opportunity" in the same way as a casino school would.
Few outside the casino or trading industry would consider it a professional opportunity or a good career choice.
Why doesn't Don and his road show turn up at "career days" at high schools and college campuses and see how well that flies?
We can look to the 90% failure rate of restaurants and figure out why in most cases, and if someone is willing to listen to proper advice, they can be counseled ahead of time about the pitfalls of restaurant ownership thus giving them an edge. Don claims to have no real idea why people fail or succeed, hence no screening process of merit.
Most people open a restaurant because they love the idea of owning a restaurant, they love to cook, they love to host parties, etc., rather than having done a careful analysis of the nature of the business, and the risk rewards involved. They do it out of passion.
How many trade out of passion for trading? It is passion for money that drives trading, not the process, unless they are simply adrenaline junkies or gambling addicts.
When you take away the financial carrot, and are left with the process, you find out what the job really is all about.
Until Don can screen out those who are not qualified to attempt trading, and demonstrate that his system, if qualified for, has a 75% or higher rate of success, it is just another barker selling dreams. There is a difference in my mind between selling a dream and a genuine opportunity.