Normally, admitting ignorance and failures is a good thing. It's a sign of confidence and strength - And often an indicator of someone willing to reflect and learn.
But Brix... She's out there admitting to her ignorance, failures/mistakes (via her book - She actually wrote it in a book!), but framing her ignorance and failures/mistakes as virtues and helpful. Almost as if she doesn't even realize she was being challenged on this ignorance and these failures, and almost as if she doesn't realize we all haven't been awake for the past two years and have had full/clear view of this ignorance and these failures.
This is like a mathematician publicly pushing the idea that 2+3=23, being roundly criticized for not understanding how math works, then a couple of years later proudly publishing a book about how they were the one to have the vision to correctly see and push the idea that 2+3=23. Like wut?
But Brix... She's out there admitting to her ignorance, failures/mistakes (via her book - She actually wrote it in a book!), but framing her ignorance and failures/mistakes as virtues and helpful. Almost as if she doesn't even realize she was being challenged on this ignorance and these failures, and almost as if she doesn't realize we all haven't been awake for the past two years and have had full/clear view of this ignorance and these failures.
This is like a mathematician publicly pushing the idea that 2+3=23, being roundly criticized for not understanding how math works, then a couple of years later proudly publishing a book about how they were the one to have the vision to correctly see and push the idea that 2+3=23. Like wut?