It’s simple: he gravitates toward whoever he thinks is winning.
The moment he senses his side is losing, he abandons ship without hesitation. When he initially supported Fano, it was because he genuinely believed they would seize power quickly. The moment that prospect faded, he recast PP as the dominant force and reinvented himself as a low-level cadre almost overnight.
Then came Teddy Afro, whose massive public support clearly outshone PP’s standing, and once again, he repositioned himself to be on the winning side.I have little doubt that the moment Fano appears to be marching on Addis, Horus will resurface as their devoted cadre once more.
This is the portrait of a textbook opportunist, a man with no fixed principles, no ideological anchor, and no capacity for long-term commitment to a cause. What drives him is not conviction but comfort: the desperate need to feel like a winner at any given moment. The idea of enduring hardship or standing firm in a battle for the sake of his beliefs is entirely foreign to him.
He doesn’t follow causes. He follows momentum.
Re: Understanding the psychology of Horus
This is brutal! Horus prides himself as having over 50 years of political and life experience! I wonder if he was an EPRP member until they were defeated!
temari wrote: ↑Today, 06:52It’s simple: he gravitates toward whoever he thinks is winning.
The moment he senses his side is losing, he abandons ship without hesitation. When he initially supported Fano, it was because he genuinely believed they would seize power quickly. The moment that prospect faded, he recast PP as the dominant force and reinvented himself as a low-level cadre almost overnight.
Then came Teddy Afro, whose massive public support clearly outshone PP’s standing, and once again, he repositioned himself to be on the winning side.I have little doubt that the moment Fano appears to be marching on Addis, Horus will resurface as their devoted cadre once more.
This is the portrait of a textbook opportunist, a man with no fixed principles, no ideological anchor, and no capacity for long-term commitment to a cause. What drives him is not conviction but comfort: the desperate need to feel like a winner at any given moment. The idea of enduring hardship or standing firm in a battle for the sake of his beliefs is entirely foreign to him.
He doesn’t follow causes. He follows momentum.
Re: Understanding the psychology of Horus
Name: temari
Grade: F
Reason: Submitting AI generated response to class assignment
Action: 1st warning, refer to counseling assistance for learning disability evaluation.
signed: Horus.
Grade: F
Reason: Submitting AI generated response to class assignment
Action: 1st warning, refer to counseling assistance for learning disability evaluation.
signed: Horus.