I wasn't missing it - that part is implied by the meat of the bit I quoted.
The point is to keep in mind that just because people are laughing doesn't mean you're a genius, but people do also mock people doing great things.
Elon Musk is another easy example, look at the HN dismissal of Tesla and SpaceX over the years - even in the face of obvious massive success. You basically have to dismiss the naysayers and evaluate things for yourself.
> You basically have to dismiss the naysayers and evaluate things for yourself.
... why? Any point of view, pro or against, should be evaluated for substance.
Telsa naysayers were going on about things like "the quality sucks" "Promising FSD today is incredibly stupid", etc... well they were right? Quality has been varying depending on which part of the car you look like in a very "one step forward two steps back" way, FSD hardware did end up changing and the FSD beta is a farce, etc.
The only naysayers to dismiss are people who can't justify their position, but the same also goes for people who support something without being able to justify it. The problem isn't "naysaying", it's not saying anything at all.
There were Tesla naysayers saying EVs wouldn't work, that the model3 would never ship, that Elon was a 'fraud', etc. etc. - a lot of that is forgotten now, but it was rampant and constant and completely wrong.
I'd argue the problem is often overconfidence everywhere mixed with people who don't know what they're talking about.
I agree that stuff needs to be evaluated for substance, I just think there tends to be a pretty extreme status-quo bias by default so a naysayer is more likely to be wrong because of that.
The point is to keep in mind that just because people are laughing doesn't mean you're a genius, but people do also mock people doing great things.
Elon Musk is another easy example, look at the HN dismissal of Tesla and SpaceX over the years - even in the face of obvious massive success. You basically have to dismiss the naysayers and evaluate things for yourself.