No, this is not a question. It is a Chinese proverb, it is also a statement.
Then you my friend, is a fool for 5 minutes. That Chinese proverb is one of my favourites.
A fool and his money are soon parted.
night at the museum But it's a very old proverb from way back.
This essentially paraphrases: "If I tell a good lie, even a 100 men will never see through it".
There are various proverbs about fingers that include "locks and keys are not made for honest fingers." "When a finger is pointing at the moon, the fool looks at the finger" is another proverb.
sword in the hand of a fool.
If you are referring to the often quoted English phrase "A fool and his money are soon parted" it was coined by an English farmer/poet named Thomas Tusser who lived from 1524 to 1580.
of Fool
Fool
You say "Fool me once, shame on you! Fool me twice, shame on me!"This means, if you play a trick on me and I fall for it, shame on you for fooling me. But if you play a trick on me and I fall for it again, then shame on me for being foolish.
scolding is much better or nice than foolish or unwanted smile