Edit to add: General Grant, who won the U.S. Civil War (though at too high of losses) ran a general, or dry goods, store, prior to the war bringing him back into active service.
It's not a cope, as you say elsewhere in this thread. I'm generally on Russia's side in this war, but just because the dude's a chef, it doesn't mean he can't also be a capable (or semi-competent by recent very modest gains at least) general.
Some of the deepest thinkers I have met were in the grocery, restaurant, hospitality, and catering businesses. The difference with them is… they have a perfect face for the public, bc that’s their job. Some people confuse that with being of lesser intelligence, but I would argue that it is the opposite for those who start at the beginning and rise up to a great career.
A man of many talents perhaps?
Edit to add: General Grant, who won the U.S. Civil War (though at too high of losses) ran a general, or dry goods, store, prior to the war bringing him back into active service.
It's not a cope, as you say elsewhere in this thread. I'm generally on Russia's side in this war, but just because the dude's a chef, it doesn't mean he can't also be a capable (or semi-competent by recent very modest gains at least) general.
Some of the deepest thinkers I have met were in the grocery, restaurant, hospitality, and catering businesses. The difference with them is… they have a perfect face for the public, bc that’s their job. Some people confuse that with being of lesser intelligence, but I would argue that it is the opposite for those who start at the beginning and rise up to a great career.