![]() ![]() He has basically put into better words a lot of the things I try and talk about on this blog. Whether his anecdotes are true or not, the fundamental concepts and his way of thinking about money and work are spot on. I think he excuses away a lot of social responsibility and that his personal investment stories are unhelpful.īut that’s beside the point. So I finally bit the bullet and cynically started reading.īut the more I read the more I found myself nodding along. Well, that makes sense and is pretty close to what I bang on about all the time. “It’s not how much money you make, it’s how much money you keep.” A few days ago I was listening to a podcast and heard the quote: ![]() I hate the branding – “what the rich teach their kids about money that the poor and middle class do not!” – and there’s a sort of snobbish cult following around the book that I can’t stand. I have also read quite a bit of criticism that has left with an image that it just tells you to get big loans, buy lots of property and aggressively chase being rich while laughing at the stupidity of the poor folk.īut I keep hearing quotes from it that I actually really agree with. And it’s also one that I have been putting off reading for a long time. Rich Dad Poor Dad by Robert Kiyosaki is probably the most well known ‘how to be rich’ books ever written. ![]()
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