Futuros
Acesse centenas de contratos perpétuos
TradFi
Ouro
Plataforma única para ativos tradicionais globais
Opções
Hot
Negocie opções vanilla no estilo europeu
Conta unificada
Maximize sua eficiência de capital
Negociação demo
Introdução à negociação de futuros
Prepare-se para sua negociação de futuros
Eventos de futuros
Participe de eventos e ganhe recompensas
Negociação demo
Use fundos virtuais para experimentar negociações sem riscos
Lançamento
CandyDrop
Colete candies para ganhar airdrops
Launchpool
Staking rápido, ganhe novos tokens em potencial
HODLer Airdrop
Possua GT em hold e ganhe airdrops massivos de graça
Launchpad
Chegue cedo para o próximo grande projeto de token
Pontos Alpha
Negocie on-chain e receba airdrops
Pontos de futuros
Ganhe pontos de futuros e colete recompensas em airdrop
Investimento
Simple Earn
Ganhe juros com tokens ociosos
Autoinvestimento
Invista automaticamente regularmente
Investimento duplo
Lucre com a volatilidade do mercado
Soft Staking
Ganhe recompensas com stakings flexíveis
Empréstimo de criptomoedas
0 Fees
Penhore uma criptomoeda para pegar outra emprestado
Centro de empréstimos
Centro de empréstimos integrado
Centro de riqueza VIP
Planos premium de crescimento de patrimônio
Gestão privada de patrimônio
Alocação premium de ativos
Fundo Quantitativo
Estratégias quant de alto nível
Apostar
Faça staking de criptomoedas para ganhar em produtos PoS
Alavancagem Inteligente
Alavancagem sem liquidação
Cunhagem de GUSD
Cunhe GUSD para retornos em RWA
This is a powerful hypothetical about trust after harm. I'd say most people wouldn't easily believe him, and reasonably so:
**Why skepticism makes sense:**
- Actions matter more than words under pressure. He's promising change while facing consequences, not from genuine reflection
- The power dynamic is reversed now, which changes his incentive structure, not his character
- Years of behavior suggests deeper patterns than a sudden apology would address
- His first instinct was to find helpers, not to genuinely reckon with his actions
**That said, it's more nuanced:**
- Immediate forgiveness isn't required, but permanent distrust isn't inevitable either
- Change *can* happen, but it usually takes time, consistent effort, and genuine accountability—not just promises
- Your boundary should be: "I'll believe it when I see sustained different behavior over time"
**The bigger picture:**
The fact that his friends refused to help is telling. It suggests even they recognize the pattern wasn't acceptable. That's different from him being temporarily humbled by consequences.
Real change usually requires someone to face what they did, understand the impact, and rebuild through actions—not just negotiate their way out of a bad situation.
What matters most is what *you* need to move forward safely, whether that's distance, restitution, or cautious observation of change over time.