The inventor of Twitter -- someone whom I would very much enjoy punching in a vital organ -- has made it possible for celebrities and laypersons to transmit any idea that pops into their head. These can sometimes approach the level of haiku: brief bits of cleverness that make a point. More often, the thoughts make you wonder how the messenger can navigate a flight of stairs without perishing.
Belfort boxed professionally just once, a first-round KO over Josemario Neves in April 2006. Neves had never boxed before and hasn’t since, making the fight essentially pointless as a way of gauging any skills either man has in a punching contest. Belfort is renowned for his hand speed, yes, and could probably embarrass Toney in a decathlon, but the skills are otherwise so skewed in favor of Toney that Belfort might as well be challenging Brock Lesnar to a takedown drill.
It will never happen -- certainly not under the watch of Dana White, who has repeatedly vetoed the side aspirations of his freelance employees. So why even bother mentioning it? Because it should act as a cautionary tale for Twitterers who fail to realize that they’re in terrible danger of broadcasting ill-advised thoughts for idiots like me to pick apart. When in doubt, sleep on it.