Rich Dad’s Conspiracy of the Rich: The 8 New Rules of Money
by Randy Radic
Rich
Dads Conspiracy of the Rich: The 8 New Rules of Money
By Robert T. Kiyosaki
Business Plus 2009
Robert Anton
Wilson, in his book Everything
Is Under Control, reported that a random telephone
survey of 800 American adults in September 1996 found that 74 percent
virtually three out of four citizens believe that
the U.S. government regularly engages in conspiratorial and clandestine
operations.
Robert Kiyosaki
the author of Rich Dads Conspiracy of the Rich
agrees with the 74 percent surveyed in 1996. As Kiyosaki
writes in his book: So has there been a conspiracy? I believe
so, in a way. He goes on to explain why he believes so, citing
the lack of financial education in the school systems, the Federal
Reserve Act, and Nixons 1971 dismissal of the gold standard.
And most interestingly, Kiyosaki believes that 401(k) retirement
vehicles placed the retirement money of average people in the hands
of Wall Street.
The first chapter
of the book is entitled Can Obama Save the World? Kiyosakis
answer is no. And apparently, Obama doesnt want to even if
he could. For he appointed Summers and Geithner, both of who played
a part in repealing the Glass Steagall Act. In other words, its
the same old same old. Nothing has changed. Which means that the
average person needs to understand how taxes, debt, inflation, and
retirement affect them. Kiyosaki sums up the chapter by stating
that once one understands the new rules of money, then one can opt
out of the conspiracy of the rich.
From there,
Kiyosaki moves on to explain how we got where we are. He points
the finger at the Federal Reserve Bank, which inflates the money
supply, which destroys the value of savings and retirement plans.
And he makes it very clear that the rules of money changed dramatically
when the U.S. went off the gold standard in 1971. For up until that
time, technically, prior to 1971, the U.S. dollar was a derivative
of gold. After 1971, the U.S. dollar became a derivative
of debt.
Kiyosaki proceeds
to discuss what he calls The Invisible Bank Robbery.
He says since money is invisible, a derivative of debt, bank
robberies by bankers have become invisible. Two ways these
invisible robberies occur are: fractional reserve banking, which
is nothing more than banks lending money they dont have; and
deposit insurance, which protects the bankers not savers.
Then he asks a very pertinent question: why should an insurance
company like AIG receive bailout money in the first place? Isnt
bailout money reserved for banks? His answer is gloriously
simple: because it owed the biggest banks in the world a lot
of money and didnt have the cash to pay up.
After allocating
the first half of his book to talking about the conspiracy, Kiyosaki
utilizes the second half of the book describing how to fight back.
And although he acknowledges that the Fed is the culprit, he does
not advocate abolishing it. For as he asks, What would replace
it? How much chaos would that cause? And how long would that take?
Instead, Kiyosaki advocates using the new rules of money to ones
advantage.
He lists five
new rules at the beginning of the second part of the book. They
are as follows: money is knowledge; learn how to use debt; learn
to control cash flow; prepare for bad times and you will only know
good times; and the need for speed. The latter rule the need
for speed is an eye-opener. In other words, it should be
read, memorized and implemented by everyone.
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the rest of the article
June
9, 2010
Copyright
© 2010 Silver Monthly
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