Modern Wisdom - #932 - Dave Ramsey - Why Smart People Make Stupid Money Decisions
Episode Date: April 24, 2025Dave Ramsey is a personal finance expert, podcaster, and an author. The rules of money aren’t complicated. Make more than you spend, live below your means. So why is it still so hard to get right? W...hat are the real keys to building wealth, and how do we stop sabotaging ourselves along the way? Expect to learn why you need to become ruthless to become successful, why Gen Z & Millennials face a uniquely different financial landscape than Boomers or Gen X did, the biggest psychological errors people make when it comes to thinking about wealth and business building, how to build a business you love, Why it’s so hard for people to change their financial behavior even when they know what to do, if Is the cost of living crisis a spending crisis or an earning crisis, and much more… Sponsors: See discounts for all the products I use and recommend: https://chriswillx.com/deals Get up to $50 off the RP Hypertrophy App at https://rpstrength.com/modernwisdom (use code MODERNWISDOM) Get 5 Free Travel Packs, Free Liquid Vitamin D, and more from AG1 at https://ag1.info/modernwisdom Get the Whoop 4.0 for free and get your first month for free at https://join.whoop.com/modernwisdom Extra Stuff: Get my free reading list of 100 books to read before you die: https://chriswillx.com/books Try my productivity energy drink Neutonic: https://neutonic.com/modernwisdom Episodes You Might Enjoy: #577 - David Goggins - This Is How To Master Your Life: https://tinyurl.com/43hv6y59 #712 - Dr Jordan Peterson - How To Destroy Your Negative Beliefs: https://tinyurl.com/2rtz7avf #700 - Dr Andrew Huberman - The Secret Tools To Hack Your Brain: https://tinyurl.com/3ccn5vkp - Get In Touch: Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/chriswillx Twitter: https://www.twitter.com/chriswillx YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/modernwisdompodcast Email: https://chriswillx.com/contact - Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Let's talk about both of our favorite topics, Dr. John Delaney.
And it's his favorite topic.
It is.
Oh man.
I am.
I star though.
I mean, he is blown up.
He is brilliant.
He's quick.
And he's helping a lot of people.
We're real proud of him.
I have no idea how I wasn't familiar with him until relatively recently.
I guess the internet's a big place, right?
And, um, but he's great.
He's, he came out to see me here in Austin.
We immediately had that, did we just become best friends moment?
And, uh, yeah, he's, he's phenomenal.
His insights are great.
He seems to have, I'm going to put this, he's got kind of a Ramsey signature to him in a way, quite
firm, I would say, sometimes bordering on scary, moderately intimidating, but also sort
of warm and sort of feels like he's doing it, like a, a particularly brash uncle that needs to give you the sort of
kick in the ass that you needed.
Yeah, that loves you.
And, uh, but it'll tell you the truth.
And that's what we all try to do around Ramsey and, uh, portray
the both of those things.
A, we love you.
And B, that means we have to tell you the truth, uh, for your
own good, cause we care about you and we want you to win and
continuing to do that, uh, horrible thing that's to yourself is
silly and so whatever it is whether it's John or any the rest of us but John
certainly has fallen into that fold and he's he is brilliant he's very
articulate I mean I'm in the third meeting with him and our we're talking
about you know interviewing and talking about turning him into a rimsy
personality and he's so quick on the draw.
I went, you can do this.
All we got to do is put you on with a microphone and start answering questions.
He didn't know what it was.
And I'm like, look, I've done talk radio for 30 years.
You draw fire and reholster before the bullet hits him.
I mean, it's quick.
And so, uh, he's really, really good.
And he does care deeply.
How do you describe what you do?
Let's say that someone meets you and they're not familiar with you.
You're at a cocktail party or you're at a gathering of some kind.
So, David, tell me about what you do for work.
How do you, how do you coalesce the myriad of different things
that you've got going on?
You know, these days I would just tell them,
you know, I'm the CEO of Ramsey Solutions
and we put on a bunch of podcasts and a bunch of curriculum
and have a bunch of bestselling books
and, you know, YouTube and all that stuff.
And I'm one of the people that does all that
as well as be the CEO.
So it's kind of like that, but I mean,
there's 1,100 of us in a building
and there's 500 people doing tech all day long.
So, uh, and I've never written a line of code in my life.
So that's freaking intimidating, but that that's all part of the picture.
But I don't, you know, uh, I don't, I don't want to try to
one up somebody to cocktail party.
That's not, but yeah, the elevator pitch, if you will, that would be it.
I guess.
Yeah.
Is that where you've imagined that you might end up when you just started doing
little talk radio, coaching people, speeches in a bad suit, as you said?
Yeah.
Um, I, uh, uh, you know, I think, I think what I did realize, cause I've been
entrepreneurial my whole life and I, I did see the size of the need
and getting people out of debt is not exactly a niche market. I mean it's massive. We always laugh
and say me and Jenny Craig got a big job right and so it's massive. It's everybody right and so
I saw the size of it. What I didn't know when I was you know 32 years old and uh opened the first
little 800 square foot office and so forth. I didn't have any I was 32 years old and opened the first little 800 square foot
office and so forth, I didn't have any idea how much work it was going to be.
I didn't have any idea how much I was going to have to learn.
Of course, the rate of change in the marketplace, because in those days there wasn't internet.
Talk radio, AM talk radio, and we were on FM Talk Radio when it first came out as
well.
And then on satellite, on XM and Sirius when they launched those satellites.
It's two separate companies originally and later combined.
But I mean, so we're just dabbling in the front edges of whatever was going on in the
marketplace and trying to get to all these people.
But to scale the thing, man, when I look back 35 years, I was really had I had no idea how much work it was gonna be and that I would need
1100 people in the building to do it. I just thought you know, there's a lot of people need help. I'll go help them
Do you think that people need to be ruthless to become successful? Is that true in your experience? I
Would have to define ruthless carefully if I did that
They have to be passionate They have to define ruthless carefully if I did that. They have to be passionate, they have to be
enthusiastic. Do they have to slit other people's throat to become successful? If that's ruthless,
no, you don't. As a matter of fact, my experience is quite the contrary. The more people I help,
even people that are in the same space we're in, and you know, the more times I can assist somebody a young
person in one of these content spaces and they come around Ramsey and
you know we'll show them what to do show them what we're doing we don't have any
trade secrets this is how we do what we do anything and show them a technology
or a piece of software we're using that they didn't know about anything I could
do like that I'm not worried about it because a rising tide raises all ships. I'm really not going to go out of business because somebody launches a somebody in their 20s or 30s
launches a very successful YouTube financial whatever and there's a bunch of them. There's
several really sharp people doing that stuff right now, you included of course. And so yeah,
anything we can do to help. I don't have to cut their throat to win. Uh, but I do have to bring it.
I've got to drive the ball hard into the end zone.
It doesn't show up there by itself.
So that part of ruthless, yeah, I would go with, but not the
taking down of others part.
A positive sum mindset is, uh, a good idea in business in your opinion.
It's the only thing that works because you know I've you know for instance we
made a decision early in our career that other people in our space that we
disagreed with you know I could talk about the ideas all day long and not
even mention the person there There's no reason.
So like the very first book I had come out,
Financial Peace, it hit the New York Times.
And there was another little book that week
or that month that was coming along.
And it was this lady and I'd never heard of her,
nobody had ever heard of her,
but she was running behind us.
And I'm kind of looking over my shoulder going,
I'm a brand new guy.
And I got somebody chasing me from behind right here
and then all of a sudden Susie Orman goes on Oprah and
oh, she just exploded and she zoomed past us so much all we'd got was her dust and
and
Susie and I have both helped a lot of people and she and I don't agree on a lot of things,
but I don't speak ill of her ever.
Because I actually don't think ill of her too.
But again, there's odds and ends
within the financial spectrum we might disagree with,
but there's no reason for me to trash Suzy Orman
in order to build myself up.
That's just not necessary.
So we just decided, yeah, positive sum game
is the way to go.
And you know what, it's worked out really well.
I think people can tell.
It seems to me that anybody that's been in business
for a sufficiently long time and hasn't realized
that if you start to screw people over,
eventually it comes back to get you.
I don't know whether it's karmic retribution,
I don't know whether it's you're just rolling the dice, uh, into personally
in the same way so many times that eventually somebody cottons on and it's
the wrong place at the wrong time with the wrong person, but people get what
they deserve in business.
I've found.
And sometimes it works out positively.
I mean, I can think of two guys on the radio business that are in the early
days, hated our show and just radio business that in the early days hated our show
and just trashed us in the marketplace.
They said, we'll never put you on one of our radio stations.
You're just awful and you're country fried
and it's not entertaining.
And, you know, they would just insult us.
And we would go to these conventions and we would say,
oh, so and so, stay away from him.
He's like angry about the whole thing.
And then, you know, they work for big corporations,
they get fired, and they're out there doing consulting,
and both of them ended up working for us
before it was over.
And so, obviously they came around
and didn't work for us while hating us,
but, you know, over the years I wore them down,
is what it amounted to.
And then when they were left vulnerable
and we could use the influence that they had
by helping us get on some of the radio stations
and they had actually had a true change of heart,
not because I gave them a check, but it was fun.
It was kind of fun.
It was kind of looked back and went,
well, that worked out pretty well.
Dave Ramsey killed me with kindness.
Who would have thought it?
Yeah, so one of the current trends or two of the current trends that I see Dave Ramsey killed me with kindness. Who would have thought it? Yeah.
So one of the current trends or two of the current trends that I see that are
very popular amongst some of my friends, but a lot of the internet, one is that
college or university in the UK is a waste of time that any sort of formal
education doesn't give you that much of an advantage that it's kind of a net
negative.
And the second one being that given that you can work from anywhere remotely,
that most people can solo entrepreneur their way to some degree of independent
ownership of what it is that they do, that a nine to five is, it's quite often
derogated in one form or another.
What's your thoughts on the usefulness of formal education for people who are
thinking, Hey, I want to be successful.
I want to feel secure.
I want to be able to build a life that's good for me.
And then what do you make of the nine to fives of a sucker's you should
always go and work for yourself?
Higher ed has made a mess of itself.
It did two things that has completely damaged it to
the point that the pendulum is swinging all the way over where you're talking
about. It used to be everyone needed a college degree now no one needs a college
degree. It's swung but and part of that just higher ed's just been stupid. The two
things that they did was number one they drove people deeply in debt that could
never get an ROI on that degree.
I mean, the amount that they're charging and facilitating trillions of dollars of student
loan debt now with an S, trillions, wow, you know, they just screwed people over by overcharging.
The second thing that's kind of a subset of that
or a sister to that is they presented people
with ridiculous degree fields
that absolutely have no chance
of having any utilitarian value in the marketplace.
So we always laugh and say,
you get a degree in left-handed puppetry
and you go 200 grand in debt to do it.
Well, both are useless.
I mean, it's just silly. Or left, You know, German polka history. You know,
what are you gonna do with that? Be a barista? I mean this is just dumb. And so
but higher ed presented that as a valid use of those dollars, a valid use of
studying, a valid use of your brain cells to actually get a degree in something
absolutely asinine.
And so that has caused people to throw the whole baby out with the bathwater and say,
okay, well, an accounting degree is of no value.
Well, that's dumb.
Of course, an accounting degree is of value.
You would learn how to do accounting, you know, and therefore you could be a CPA.
Hello. You would learn how to do accounting, you know, and there you therefore you can be a CPA. Hello
You know, and so that's you know, if you want to get a law degree
If you're gonna be a lawyer, you're gonna you know, I hope my doctor actually studies before he cuts me
You know, I mean so this idea that all academia is needs to be thrown out and is is ludicrous is also ridiculous
so You know we just tell people buy, get a
good buy on your education and study something useful. So don't pay 10x what
you need to do to get a marketing degree. Go to the, you know, you're in Austin, go
the University of Texas, right? Which is a great school. It's not that stinking
expensive. It's an in-state school and it's probably 12, $14,000 a year tuition.
And, uh, or you can go over to some crazy thing.
It's got a brand name on it and pay 80 grand a year for basically the same degree.
Well, that's dumb.
Don't do that.
And then, and then study something that's useful.
So I'm big on education.
Just on that point there.
Um, I learned from Scott Galloway that students who leave their university in the top quintile,
I think, get the best jobs regardless of which university they go to.
So basically what you should be trying to do is track the university level.
Also you should be thinking about how expensive is this going to be.
But if you are a pretty smart kid going to a university where you're going
to be one of the smartest in the class is a really good idea going to a university
where you're going to be 30th percentile 40th percentile down that actually is
less predictive of you coming out and getting a better job.
So I thought that was a, another interesting twist.
I'll add to that and go the job you get when you're 22, coming out of getting a better job. So I thought that was another interesting twist. I'll add to that and go, the job you get when you're 22,
coming out of undergrad is irrelevant.
What matters is what happened 10 years later.
Where are you when you're 32?
Now the difference in two students of where they are
when they're 22 and 32, you start them at 22,
they start the exact same career field,
they come from the same university,
and they end up in two dramatically different places.
Translation, the degree didn't cause it,
the individual did.
The hustle, the perseverance, the scrappiness,
the grit, the I will not be denied,
the, what we were talking about earlier,
the, you know, that version of ruthless,
it's not throat cutting.
You know, I'm gonna put the freaking ball in the end zone.
That's who, you're the I'm going to put the freaking ball in the end zone.
That's who, you're the secret sauce, not your degree.
Degrees don't make people successful.
They put tools in the belts of people that were going to be successful anyway.
So I use my statistics class that I took 40 years ago, almost every week, in running Ramsey.
I actually look at the data coming in.
I use the accounting classes, the multiple accounting classes I took to
get a business degree at the University of Tennessee 40 years ago I use it almost
every week here so those are tools in my belt did those things cause Dave Ramsey
no no they didn't cause this they're just something that was just a good saw
a good hammer to do the work with and so what we need to teach people
Is to how to scrap and how to have grit and how to get up leave the cave kill something and drag it home
But then give them a good weapon to kill something and drag it home with and that's what education is for
So where you go to school there is not a single piece of data
Anywhere that says where you went to
school is correlated with success.
As a matter of fact, 76% of the CEOs of public of the top 500, the S and P 500
publicly traded companies are public school graduates.
They didn't go to Harvard or Yale 76%.
So that has, it's, so it's got to do with, you know, again, the individual.
So we teach kids, hey, go be somebody
and get you some tools, but don't go, oh, I've got a degree.
You know, I had some guy come into my office
a few years ago working for us.
He's like, I got, he had more degrees than a thermometer.
And he's like, well, people pay out here,
they pay a hundred, they pay a hundred thousand dollars
more than you're paying for this.
And I'm like, dude, you work for a small business.
We don't respect degrees.
What we respect is effort and what we respect as results.
And so your raise here is effective when you are.
What about the working for a business versus building your own?
Oh, I've been working for myself just about my whole life.
So I'm a huge, um, advocate of starting and running your own thing.
I love that.
advocate of starting and running your own thing. I love that and I love that the this huge upheaval of uprising of entrepreneurism and start something and
side hustle and all of that because of the ease of access into the marketplace
with the digital tools we have now but the 20-somethings disease and the
Millennials they're the most entrepreneurial generations I've ever seen. I'm a classic boomer but I've
got a ton of disease. I got probably 500-600 of disease working on my team
and they are an incredible generation. They're very entrepreneurial, they're
very passionate, they're very mission driven, they question everything which is
what it takes to win in business and I just, they question, you know, why do we do this? They
don't just assume, boomers just assume that somebody knew what they were doing. Z doesn't
assume that because they grew up with a magic wand in their hand, they could push a button,
stuff showed up on their doorstep. So they don't assume that anybody knows what they're
doing, which is awesome. So I'm big on that But should everyone be in business for themselves? No
No, I mean, I mean plenty of people that you know, the way they're wired their personality the way they look at stuff
You know that they'll do great and you can get with an organization and be a part of an organization and be very entrepreneurial
And be a key part of that and bring all those same skills without being a solopreneur with your iPhone in
your mother's basement.
You don't have to do that in order to be entrepreneurial and be successful.
You can take those same passions and skills into the marketplace.
If you find the right organization, I like to think our building's full of them
because I don't really want people here that are just doing a J.O.B.
Do Gen Z and millennials face a uniquely different financial
landscape than boomers or Gen X did?
Uh, they're much, Z's are much more serious.
Uh, the ones that are, I got to qualify that there's two Z's.
There's no middle ground.
There's two types.
Awesome.
And so you might, I thought you might bring this up.
Yeah.
Yeah.
It's, uh, and so like taking calls on the Ramsey show, we get a Z on the air middle ground. There's two types. Awesome. And so you might, I thought you might bring this up. Yeah. Yeah.
And so like taking calls on the Ramsey show, we get a Z on the air that they've got, they've studied all our stuff.
They know our steps.
They know exactly what to do.
And they're just calling in for some clarification on the nuance because they're
already, they're already on the bike riding baby.
I mean, they're going, uh, cause they're very serious minded, very focused, the
ones that are, and, uh, they they're gonna have unbelievable wealth as a result
because A, they're starting early
and two, they've got this singular focus.
They're not distracted by everything shiny.
Where like Boomers, you know, you think about,
you know, the movies in the 80s and stuff,
Greed is Good, Gordon Gekko and all that.
You know, Boomers were about acquisition and flash
and the big car and the Rolex.
Zs don't give a crap.
They wanna get it done and they wanna stack some cash
and the ones that are on it.
And so again, they're very easy to teach
because you're not having to light them on fire.
They're already on fire.
You just gotta point them at something
and then pull the trigger, right?
And so it's a lot easier than lighting wet wood.
And so I love, again, I've got a huge respect for them.
I enjoy working with them.
And I like arguing with them
because they bring some good arguments
because they question everything.
Why you say that, Ramsey?
Who you think you are?
I don't care if 20 million people listen to you every day.
I don't care.
I wanna know.
I'm 19 freaking years old
and I'm gonna question that you have any sense at all, Ram day. I don't care. I want to know I'm 19 freaking years old and I'm going to question that
you have any sense at all Ramsey.
And that's fun.
And it makes good radio too.
You mentioned before, uh, some of the predictive traits that somebody coming
out of university or a young adult would have if you were to design a successful human,
somebody that's going to go on to become wealthy,
independent, be able to forge the sort of life from
a financial perspective and from
a commercial perspective that most people want to,
what would be the traits that you would give them?
What would be the things that you would bless them with?
Well, that's a beautiful question. I'd have to think on that for
about a week. Off the cuff, which is probably not a great answer, but that's
the only option we got here. When I made my first fortune, I was a
millionaire before I was 26 and then I lost everything in the next two and a half years.
That guy is no longer here.
I not only went broke, I was broken. And so the arrogant little twerp
got the snot beat out of him is what it amounts to. And so I'm still very confident,
but I'm not... I was very me-centered. Again, Jaguars and Rolexes and so on. And I didn't get joy from that even before I went broke. The joy I've gotten in the following 30 years serving others,
helping others, has far exceeded any acquisition of anything or any number on the
net worth balance sheet. And so the first thing I would tell
them to do is learn how to serve to be other centered instead
of self centered. There's greater joy in it. You're very
attractive, the marketplace will eat it up. And the money will
come as a byproduct. But if you make money the target, it
doesn't come as a byproduct.
What does that look like structurally or tactically?
How do you implement that?
Well, what I'm asking is think about if you go, take about a macro version of you going
into a real fine dining establishment and you got my wife and I had a nice dinner the
night with an incredible service and the guy brought over the psalm and we picked out an incredible bottle of wine and he talked us through the these James Beard chefs selection
right and the whole thing. Man we left there that guy was part of our family. He
served us. We didn't learn about him or his kids. We didn't want to hear about
his goals in life. We didn't have a chat about
whatever, we got food and wine and he took care of us.
And you know what we did?
We left a mammoth tip to say thank you.
And my friend Rabbi Daniel Appen says that when you serve your customers well, they give
you certificates of appreciation with presidents' faces on them.
And Blanchard says that profit is the applause your customers give you certificates of appreciation with presidents faces on them and
Blanchard says that profit is the applause your customers give you after you did a good show
not before and so
Profit comes when you serve you can't beat money away
If you love people in mass and the more of them you love and the more of them you help with their lives and with their
Dreams money will stack you have a basement full of money. It's crazy. It just comes at you.
You can't keep it away. And so, but I was the opposite in my early days. That's why I brought
that up. I was going, trying to get money. And the by-product was I got none and I didn't get
happiness either. And I didn't get joy and I wasn't fulfilled and I got some stuff.
But if you get enough stuff, it's just stuff.
And he was the most toys when he dies is dead, you know?
So, I mean, it's just what is it?
And so it's this existential crisis, if you will.
And so the serving of others would be the first thing and be other centered and
let profit take care of itself.
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Uh, the second thing I would add, if we're going to put
ingredients into this individual is, uh, somehow I would install work ethic, uh,
with seven doses of grit and perseverance.
Um, so I, uh, you know, I, one guy come in here and he said, I'm burnt out.
And I said, dude, that's impossible.
You were never on fire.
And so, I mean, you, you just, you know, I want to work as little as I can possibly
work and make as much as I can possibly make.
That's not how it works.
You, you, you reap what you sow.
If you put a little bit of corn in the ground, you get a little bit of corn.
If you put a lot of corn in the ground, you get a lot of corn.
It's a simple thing. And so when in doubt get up and
go do something. When you're scared go do something. When you're mad go do
something. When you're happy go do something. Just be doing something. Be
out there kicking it and moving it around trying something new, falling on
your face, failing forward. Get it, get it, get it, get it, get it, get it, and
there's no substitute for that. Why don't we workaholic? I'm not suggesting you be a workaholic.
When you get home, turn it all off. Be there with your spouse, be there with your kid, pet the dog.
That's fine. But while you're at work, work. People sit at work and look at Facebook and they're not
in the SEO business. I mean, you're just are playing some stupid game
on their phone.
What in the world?
Do your work, man.
I mean, work on your work.
And so, if you work in a carpentry crew
and everybody else is swinging a hammer
and you're sitting around checking your phone,
somebody will throw something at you.
You know, I mean, so act like that, get after it.
And so you gotta have that penchant for action and grit and
perseverance that follows under the heading of work ethic. And so, you know, that and
then I would, this next thing I would add is just where there is no vision that people
perish. So start looking down the road. Where are we going? Where are we going with this?
And start setting some short or some long term goals. And then the short term goals
that cause those long termterm goals to appear.
And so in other words, if you said,
I wanna lose weight, okay, great.
I wanna lose how much?
30 pounds, win 90 days.
Okay, that's a long-term sorta goal.
And you go, okay,
so what are the short-term goals to do that?
Well, there's exercise every day
that includes aerobic movement.
There's water intake and cut out the gluten and the sugar.
It's not rocket science.
You don't need Oprah to tell you how to do this.
Everyone knows what to do.
But now you've got to do the daily habits,
the daily goals that cause the long-term goal to hit.
If you want to make $100,000 a year, what is that?
It's $8,333 a month.
How many things do you need to sell?
What do you got to do to do that?
And start breaking that down into daily activities?
They're gonna take me to that annual income goal. I want to make a million dollars a year
How many of these books do I need to sell?
How many you know, what have I got to do and you can you can break it out?
It's simple sixth grade math and then you break it down into a daily
Activity that creates that goal so this vision out to the future that drives the daily work ethic and gives you inspiration and hope that as I push this through, okay man we're
ahead of schedule, we're ahead of schedule, we're ahead of my daily goal in
the last 10 days I'm at 12 day mark. Good. All right. Boom. We're on. And so I can
keep going. I may get there even faster than I thought and you just keep laying
it out that way and goals are just when they're done right and they're yours and
you own them and the math is put with them.
They're very motivating and it's it's vision with work clothes on.
Yeah, I think the point on how hard people work.
There is a unique category of hell where somebody complains about results that they didn't get from work that they didn't put in.
Yeah.
And I mean, it's cause and effect.
You're seeing cause and effect happen right in front of you.
And there's not really anything that can be said that you mentioned, you know,
I guess you alluded during, uh, your first, the first phase, Ramsey 1.0,
I guess, uh, pre bankruptcy, uh, that was, uh, getting the shit kicked out of you.
And then turning that around,
realizing, oh, wow, I wasn't as smart as I thought, this was difficult.
And then you also said that grit, determination, some kind of resilience
is one of the traits that you would like to give to somebody.
I think a lot of the time, I'd be interested to know whether,
how much hope you had during that moment while you were during the real financial strife.
Because in retrospect, it's very easy to weave a narrative together of,
this is why I needed to learn this thing.
And look, in the grand arc of my life,
I have come into land with much more insight and wisdom.
And I can see that for what it was.
This was somebody that was too flashed, that was over leveraged,
that was using debt in a way that wasn't efficient.
And I paid the price and this is how I've come out of it.
But in my experience, during that process, it doesn't feel like that at all.
There's no grander purpose to this thing.
You're just wallowing in uncertainty and fear and confusion and self-doubt and criticism
and pain.
So I just want to kind of get a sense, let's say that somebody, hopefully not bankruptcy for a million dollars, tuned up to the amount of a million dollars, but somebody's going through a bit of a rough time and you're like, look, this is a way to try and reframe that difficulty right now psychologically, so that you can start to see things with a little bit more equanimity. Now, I wonder how much you were capable of doing that at the time and how much this is
you retrospectively realizing that it was good for you.
It ebbed and flowed at the time.
And so I distinctly remember standing in the shower sobbing with it so hot in my face,
I could barely stand there because I did not know what to do. I was
so scared I couldn't breathe and I have a wife and a brand new baby and a toddler and the poor
woman thought she married Sir Galahad and turns out it was Goober and I stand there feeling like
a complete abject failure. Our water and our electricity to our home with two babies got cut off. I mean it was unbelievable. So yeah, like I said, it not only
went broke, it broke me, but I was so scared I couldn't breathe. And then I'd
walk out in the sunshine and find some little deal, find some little thing, and
go live the next day, a little vitamin D and go to church and the pastor would be
inspiring. I'd have some a good moment in prayer where I felt like God was talking to me,
you're gonna be okay. I distinctly remember we filed bankruptcy in August, I mean in September,
September 23rd of 1988. I was 28 years old. I'm 64 now. But I can remember like it was this morning in
August about 30 days before we filed, I couldn't sleep and I got up at 4 o'clock in the morning
and I was, the kids are asleep, Sharon's asleep, and I was sitting in my little recliner and
I had some books stacked there that I was reading and I had a Bible sitting there and I was just
crying. I was scared and I thought okay God you're gonna have to help me because
I don't know how to do this and I randomly opened my Bible and it fell
open and I just started looking down the page and there was Romans 5 and it says, rejoice in your tribulations.
And I looked up at heaven and I said, I don't think so.
Wow.
And because tribulations create perseverance
and perseverance character and character hope.
And so I don't know how much closer you can get
from hearing a message from God than something like that.
That hasn't happened to me very often
in my 40 years of being a Christian,
but sometimes you get those chill bump experiences
and you go, oh, that was my heavenly father going, yeah, it's tough, but you're going
somewhere with this. Hang on kid, you're gonna get there. And he put his arm
around me and I got up and I went to work that day. 30 days later I filed
bankruptcy. So I was at the bottom. I mean that was the end of the
valley. Right there is where that was. But rejoice in your tribulations because
tribulations produce perseverance and perseverance character and character hope.
And hope is a gift of the Holy Spirit. And so I needed some hope and I needed to see that this
was going somewhere to your point. And so again, it ebbed and flowed. So 20 minutes before that,
I'm a basket case. Right after that, I'm strengthened and ready to go for at least a little while longer,
right?
And that's happened to me throughout my life.
Even running Ramsey, we'll have a massive success on something and then there's a massive
failure and I'm looking up going, you've got to be kidding.
And so when does this get easy?
And it doesn't.
And so I have a weird prayer life, but yeah.
It's a very antagonistic relationship with God
that you've got.
It seems passive aggressive sometimes.
It seems very-
He's not scared of me.
I'm okay.
But yeah, that's, but I'm just a real dude
and that's the way it was.
And so whether it was a spiritual thing like that, or whether there's a friend coming
alongside, I distinctly remember about two years after the bottom, we were starting to
teach some of this stuff and there were three people that cared and you know, that kind
of stuff.
And a buddy of mine, I was sitting with him at a bad, one of those bad buffets, like a
golden corral type crap or something and we went
and he's like I was whining about how hard my life was and how bad it had been and how horrible
the last four years have been and all this and he's like you know you want some cheese with that
wine dude really I mean you just you you got enough lemons you should probably make some lemonade
and he goes you need to take these experiences and use them to help other people. And then you're probably going to get healed yourself in the process.
And that's kind of where it went.
But again, there was days where I didn't know what to do.
And then there were days I felt fortified, lifted up by a friend or by a spiritual encounter or by whatever.
And so it was an ebb and flow.
But did I look in the moment and look out 20 years and go,
oh, God's going to use this for my good?
No, not even close.
Now you railed and you were mad and you were sad and yeah.
I think it's just, I have this sense that
we have a skewed perspective of the trajectory of people
coming back from rock bottom or from pullbacks that they've had in life and errors and failures, because most people
see those stories portrayed through movies and the Rocky montage is three
and a half minutes.
Right.
But in reality, it can be five or 10 years.
Yeah, exactly.
And you're looking around going, what the fuck is going on?
Like, how is this?
This isn't the way it's supposed to be.
I didn't sign up for this story.
Correct.
And the self-belief of the protagonist rarely wavers.
Sure, they're going to meet some hero's journey,
challenges, there's going to be little,
the bad guy comes out before the fight's available,
ready to start and wrecks his ankle or whatever it is.
His coach gets put into a coma and he needs to be able to
do the competition without him or whatever it might be.
But the self-belief never wavers.
I think in my experience,
that's not the way that personal growth
and that life trajectory goes at all.
No.
You are going to swim in a lot of self doubt and uncertainty.
And there's not even the promise of any glory at the end.
And that makes the whole thing feel scary because you go,
maybe I'm just applying all of this effort and I'm going to end up at an even more broken place in the future.
And you know, that false narrative that you just bounce back, you know, that thing. Like I remember when I came out with the first book,
I was being interviewed, I don't know,
some today show or something like that.
And the guy goes,
so you lost everything in your twenties
and now you're teaching people financial piece.
How did you bounce back?
And I remember it just hit me like that was stupid.
And I said, dude, when you fall that far,
you don't really bounce, it's more of a splat. And I said, dude, when you fall that far, you don't really bounce.
It's more of a splat.
And he just looked at me.
It's just like, that wasn't the answer that the fit the
it's not the narrative you're talking about.
Yeah.
So the, the thing I would say though, is if someone's watching you and I right
now talk about this and they go, yeah, I'm in the soup.
Um, people do react two different ways to being in the soup.
We all have the, uh, the fear and then the momentary courage or the momentary
hope followed by, uh, you know, another day, another injury followed by another
betrayal followed by a momentary.
We all have that.
Then the choice you have to make the individual has to make while we're in
that, and I made that choice
Semi consciously was you can choose. All right, I'm gonna quit
I'm gonna adopt the victim
language and I'm just gonna sit down because I quit and
Those are the people that never recover from their divorce
They never recover from their business loss.
Or you can say, I don't know what I'm doing. I'm so lost, I don't know what to do.
But I do know I'm gonna take the next step.
The next step.
I'm gonna do the next right thing that's in front of me
and the next right thing that's in front of me.
And it might even not be the right thing,
but I'm gonna do the next thing.
And sitting is not an option.
I'm gonna keep walking.
So keep walking if you're in this.
And the old country song,
if you're going through hell, keep going.
And so, but I meet people that,
and they call on the show,
it's like a lady called the other day
and she's talking about her divorce
like it happened 20 minutes ago.
And I'm like, how long ago were you divorced?
40 years.
I'm like, honey, you're still living
emotionally back in that thing.
The language she was using was fresh and she's
still sitting there mad at him and he's gone and
gotten two other wives since then.
I mean, you know, right.
And move on.
And so, um, but that it's real easy to quit in
that and it's not a quitter thing. It's, um, it that it's real easy to quit in that, and it's not a quitter thing.
It's, um, it's just this natural reaction.
I'm going, I'm going to get up one more time, even though I don't feel like it
and walk out into the sun, get a little vitamin D, get a little prayer, meet with
my buddy and let him make fun of me.
And then I'm going to get after it again.
And I'm just one more time, one more time.
Right.
Yeah.
I, I remember toward the end of my twenties and I was really trying to
sort of work out some of the predictors for when I felt better and when I felt
worse, when I was, when I was in the soup, as you would say, and I remember I wrote
it, action is the antidote to anxiety that you really don't fear the future when
you're moving yourself toward it.
And it's a vicious spiral because the very thing that's hardest to do when you are struggling
is precisely the thing that would make you feel better, right?
Your motivation is at its lowest.
You don't want to get out of bed.
You don't want to go to work.
You don't want to think of a new idea.
You don't want to apply effort to something or pick up the bar or not eat the comfort
food or whatever it is, stick to your routine.
But then when you start to roll that boulder a little bit, it accumulates an awful lot
of momentum, which is exactly how you see people get unbelievable outcomes.
It seems superhuman.
How does this person get so much done in a day?
How are they so successful?
How are they so balanced?
All the rest of it.
So well, they are on the positive side of the same momentum that
is currently kicking your ass.
Exactly.
You know, we developed a little theorem around here to talk to our team about
this, uh, called the momentum theorem, focused intensity over time,
multiplied by guy equals unstoppable momentum.
And one of the things we talk about in the little book I did on it was just this idea that when you have
negative momentum, you are better than you look.
When you have positive momentum,
you are not as good as you look.
That's great.
That's really good.
And so don't believe the lie either way.
And so, if you've got positive momentum,
you are harvesting crops that were planted yesterday.
Not this morning.
They were planted a year ago, put them in the ground,
and today I'm getting this fruit,
and everybody thinks I'm a genius,
but it was actually a year ago I was a genius.
And or you got crops going in the ground,
there's nothing coming out of the ground yet,
and you're planting, you're planting, you're planting,
nobody can see you, nobody knows you're there, you're anonymous, but you're a lot better than you look because
wait till this rain and the sun comes. There's going to be a crop in the spring and suddenly
you're going to be that genius. So, you know, that's how that stuff works. I remember talking about
going through this stuff, this idea of walking, continuing to walk. That was something that you
brought up. I love that. We were snow skiing the other day in Telluride and I'm a mediocre snow skier
for a 65 year old dude, right? But I like to go down the hill and go fast. I enjoy it. So,
you know, go. And so I'm skiing with my kids, like 40 and 30 years old, and they haul butt. I mean,
they go. And so the old man's trying to keep up and he's huffing and puffing. So we jumped off a
lift. We were running cruiser blues, you know good and double blues that kind of stuff
We had a black every now and then but they were cruisers
They were grooming groomedies. So we jumped off it and there's this one run on telluride that when you get the top of it
on black, it's a
It's a groomed black and it's
Unbelievably steep
You can see downtown telluride and it's unbelievably steep.
You can see downtown Telluride and it looks like you're gonna fall into Main Street when you fall.
I mean, it's right there, it looks like a toy box
and there's nothing between you and Main Street.
It's just air.
It's that steep.
It's unbelievable.
And I pulled up on top of that thing
and I looked at one of the kids, you know,
these 30 year olds, I'm like, they went, that's steep.
And I went, yeah, and if I stand here about three more heartbeats,
I'm going to walk back because I'm getting really scared. So I got to go
where the fear is going to take me over. And I thought, you know what? That's what I've done
half of my life. You got to go or the fear is going to take me over. Cause if I stood there,
my heart rate was going, this was just the other day.
I was scared.
You know what I mean?
It's like, I was scared, but I thought, you know what?
If I can, I can do this stupid thing.
I can ski it.
I know I can ski it, but I, if I stand here and think about it, it's going to, the fear
is going to kill me.
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There's a, I want to give it a better term than cultivated stupidity, conscious ignorance,
maybe you could say, or tactical ignorance around things that yeah, a lot of the time
there is, um, there is a period where you're supposed to
plan, where you're supposed to reflect and ruminate and sort of think about stuff, but that can be a
trap as well. And I think that a lot of people who like to listen to shows like yours and like mine,
uh, they'll be thinking about their thoughts. They'll be thinking about themselves. They'll
be strategizing. Um, but there is just, there is absolutely a time for straight action without having to ruminate too much.
Yeah.
You can get paralysis of the analysis.
Yeah.
What are some of the biggest psychological errors that people make
when it comes to thinking about wealth and business building?
What are the traps that people fall into?
Uh, you know, one of the ones I've been working on a lot with our the traps that people fall into?
You know, one of the ones I've been working on a lot with our Entrez leadership clients, which we coach about 10,000 small businesses, you know,
under the brand Entrez leadership that this book is in, as a matter of
fact, it's in that same brand.
And the, and then of course we work with people on the financial side.
And so I've been, you know, I did the book, Millionaire, Baby Steps Millionaires,
and this is the number one again, teaching people,
you know, here's what these millionaires look like.
We did a huge study on millionaires.
Here's what they really look like.
And so in both of those cases,
I'm spending time with the wealthy
or I'm spending time with a successful small business person.
In either case, I'm appalled
in either case, I'm appalled at how much damage
the anti-success movement has done to their psyche.
I'm appalled that they've actually, too many of them, they're very successful on almost every front,
but when I look at them and say,
you haven't done anything wrong,
you did everything right is why you're successful.
You are not a moral reprobate for becoming wealthy or becoming successful. Quite the
opposite. I'm proud of you. You have done good stuff, my son, my daughter. And I'm amazed
at somebody that's got a $5 million net worth. And I look at them and say that in their body
language changes. Their shoulders go back back their head comes up because this
communist
negative
Anti-wealth anti-success stuff that is floating around has had an impact on them and
An impact of their spirit. There's the hope stealers. I call them has stolen a lot of these people's pride their hope
and and I've started getting quite frankly pretty angry about these people
that are spreading this negative thing about successful people because I got
to tell you man I know a lot of billionaires not just millionaires and
the percentage of wealthy people that
are bad people is lower than the percentage of the population. Now there
is bad people among them, but they did not get there by doing something wrong.
By and large, they got there by doing more right than anybody else did. They
served more chicken. They served more chicken. They served more pizza.
They served more business help.
They served more something than you did.
Shut up, you know?
And man, but it's amazing to me to sit with a guy
who's got a 15 or a $20 million net worth
and a guy like me from a redneck, a hillbilly
can look at him and go, dude, I'm proud of you.
You did good.
And he goes, you know, I did.
But nobody says that to him.
Everybody says you're a dog, you're an idiot,
you're a crook, you must have done something wrong.
Eat the rich and all this stupid one percenters
and operation Wall Street's language
and all that garbage that's out there.
And it's having an impact on success
is now getting a bad name, you know?
And it didn't used to getting a bad name, you know, and it didn't used to
have a bad name in America.
Yeah.
Where do you think that's come from?
Communist college professors.
Okay.
But if that's surely those communist college professors, were they in tenure when the people that you're speaking to were going through college?
Always.
They've always been there. Honestly, truthfully,
there's very few people that believe that communism is a better system than capitalism,
unless you're on a college campus, you can't find them.
You can't even find them in communist countries that think it's better than capitalism. The Venezuelans are it's better than capitalism. There's nothing more capitalistic than a good communist, right? Honestly. But this
idea of equal wealth for unequal effort and call that fair, that's not fair. Guy works 60 hours,
he should make more money than Guy works six hours. That's not fair. A guy works 60 hours, he should make more money than a guy who works six hours.
That's not fair.
You make the same money and you work.
That's not fair.
My kids used to say growing up, well, daddy, that's not fair.
I'm like, fair is where the tilt of the world and the cotton candy is, kid.
You know, you want some fair, go get some.
Yeah.
I'm very grateful that where I'm from, the Northeast of the UK, it's spit and sawdust,
blue collar stuff.
Yeah.
There was no as in graces.
And in some ways, for the British people that are listening and the Australians and maybe
some of the Canadians and maybe the working class Americans as well, that has some pains
because if you try and stray from the beaten path, a lot of the time that's
locked down on, that's not exactly supported.
You don't, you're kind of in a role model desert.
A lot of the time there's not that many people.
I was having dinner with some Aussies and they said tall poppy syndrome.
Correct.
And I said, well, that's not an Aussie thing.
That's an Aristotle thing.
But okay.
Yeah, still.
It's a little older.
It's a little older than Australia is.
Yeah.
But still it's, you know, that poppy, you can't stick your head up. You must be cut down.
Yes.
And in envy and jealousy.
Yeah.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Exactly.
Um, I, I really didn't like that, but one of the things that it gave me was, uh,
people like the sort of person I didn't want to be like.
And avoiding pitfalls are almost as important as expediting successes.
So, okay, I don't want his relationship with his wife.
I don't want the way that he drinks his problems away.
I don't want the fact that he seems to be using gambling as his get out of jail
free card for all of the problems that he's got, et cetera, et cetera, et cetera.
And, uh, it's not working.
You're, you're, you're ideal, your value set is not working.
The fruit is not there.
And you look at that and go, okay, I don't want to do that.
Correct.
But, uh, one of the things that does give you is no as or graces or expectations,
no sense of, um, entitlement, precisely correct.
Precisely correct.
There's no, there's zero entitlement. What myth of martyrdom are you going to have?
You weren't promised anything.
And I think, uh, I wonder whether the anti wealth movement in America is kind of like
a bastard love child of the American dream from the sixties that if you give people blue
sky vision, white picket fence, this is the sort of, that if you give people blue sky vision,
white picket fence, this is the sort of world that you can get, it doesn't really matter where you
started, you can ascend into the middle class and maybe even above, that's a big hope.
And if you get to the stage where the world doesn't deliver the thing to you that you expected or that
you hoped, even if by pretty much all metrics, Gen Z and millennials financially even adjusted for inflation are in a pretty good spot.
Intergenerational competition theory, they compare themselves to where their parents were at their same age,
their ability to access things like housing and their level of comparison across the internet.
Even if they are wealthy, they don't feel that wealthy comparatively.
And that means, well, maybe
there's something wrong with the world. Maybe this is unfair in some sort of way.
Maybe the system is broken. Maybe work actually isn't the solution to these
problems. Maybe I shouldn't be resilient. Maybe the system is the issue as opposed
to the meritocracy or my efforts that I've put in or the way that I've
approached things. Yeah, I get the disenfranchised feeling.
I understand that, I've been there myself.
We were just talking about that.
But the mean old banks took Dave down, right?
The mean old IRS took Dave down.
The president changed the tax law
and it affected the real estate business in the 80s,
big time, shut down the entire SNL industry because of that.
And so I was a victim, I was a victim, I was a victim of all these things.
And yet I was the one signed up for the trip.
No one made me sign those documents.
No one made me sign those mortgages.
No one made me do any of it.
It was an act of my free, stupid will.
And so I had to kind of get through that. So if you're going
to stand and scream at the machine, 40 years later, where are you? Still standing there,
screaming at the machine. And you've had 40 years of substandard life. So it just doesn't work
of substandard life. So it just doesn't work for me. It's impractical to me. The philosophy, that philosophy is I'm going to be a victim, I'm going to scream about this, I deserve better,
the system is broken. You can yell about all that if you want, but you're not controlling any of
the controllables. Your only option to have a higher quality life is to control the controllables.
And are there, is there racism? Yes. Is there sexism? Yes.
Are people less likely to believe a guy that is bald than a guy who has a great head of hair? Yes.
There's baldism. And so there's all kinds of things that can hold you back
that are unfair, but I can't fix that
since I choose not to have a hair piece.
I can't fix that.
So I've get to do it anyway.
I can stand and yell about how unfair it is
that people in the radio business thought
because I was broadcasting from Nashville,
I must not be wearing shoes and being a double wide because they had ignorant stereotypes
of southern hillbillies right and then because they'd watched the Beverly hillbillies when they
were a child and thought that was real and so you know ignorance ignorance is what all uh
prejudice is based in and and so are those things real did Did I get, as I grew a 640 station network,
did I get unfairly characterized as not being smart because I had a Southern accent?
Like every day.
And I can yell about that, but I don't think I'm gonna change the stereotype of
some Yankee in Cleveland, Ohio.
The only thing I can do is go outlast him
and then he ends up working for me later.
Getting onto the principles of business,
how do you come to think about people building a business
that they're going to love?
What we started figuring out as we looked at our history
and the things that we had
been through was that there was actually a cadence, there was actually a rhythm to it
and there was some leveling up as we went along.
And we start trying to quantify how that happened and what the levels were.
And then we started looking at, okay, it's not just germane to the Ramsey story, the
Ramsey solutions growing from a card table in my living room to a $300 million
operation today. So it's not just germane to that.
But if I'm talking to a heat and air guy that's got 40 trucks out there and he's
got a successful heating and air business, which is a lot,
we talk to that guy every day. Or I'm talking to a veterinarian that's got,
you know, 30 employees in a huge, um,
large and
small animal operation doing very well financially or a dentist. These are our
small business people that we're coaching all the time. What are they
seeing? You know, what are we seeing as we walk with them over a decade? What is
holding them back? Where are they? And so we started identifying and trying to put
words to the framework that we were seeing naturally.
And it was a struggle.
We wanted to do that because we had the experience with the Total Money Makeover book, which
is like 12 million copies sold now, that the baby steps that we teach, the seven baby steps,
the fact that we gave someone a clear path caused them to take action because they could see that
it was if I do this then I'm going to do this then I'm going to do this then I'm going to do this.
It gave them the next thing to do and then they would take action versus sitting and getting as
we said earlier paralysis of the analysis. So a clear path gives people hope. If I know what
roads I'm taking to get to Florida I can step down on the accelerator because I've got a plan.
I'm going to go there and I'm going to take that exit,
and then I'm going to turn there,
and I've got a plan to get to Florida from where I am right now.
So I can go.
But if I don't know where I'm going,
it's a little hard to be enthusiastic about it.
So that's what started this whole thing.
Then we built what we called the Entrez Leadership System,
which is just the clear
path for small businesses.
The first piece of it that the book is based on is the five stages of a business, a small
business in particular.
Again, we work with 98% of our customers are 200 and fewer team members.
So these are the quintessential small businesses.
54% of the gross domestic product in America today is created by that group. Over half of the economy in America is small
business. They are literally mathematically the backbone of the
economy. And so what are they going through? Well the first stage is we
talked about it early in the conversation is the treadmill operator,
the solopreneur. And I'm just gonna set up a table, I'm gonna turn on a computer,
I'm gonna do whatever, I'm gonna swing a computer, I'm going to do whatever, I'm going to swing a hammer, I'm going to turn a wrench, whatever
it is you're going to do.
But the treadmill operator is when you first get started.
It's exciting because you're jazzed up, you're living the dream and you're working your butt
off and it's starting to work and it makes you smile and I'm not working for the man,
I got control of my destiny.
It's just a blast.
But you are running your legs off
because you are the sole producer of revenue
and you're the sole producer of the product.
And so you not only gotta make the widget and deliver it,
but then you gotta collect the money
for making the widget and delivering it.
And if you don't come to work one day, nothing happens.
If you don't come to work for a week
because you're on vacation, revenue goes down
because no one else is
producing revenue.
You're on a treadmill.
At this stage, I would come home from work and flop
down on the couch and my wife would go, what'd you do
today?
And I have no idea, but I did a lot of it and I'm
exhausted.
And so just run, run, run, run, run.
I was working 16 hour days, man, getting this
thing off the ground.
And, um, and she had two little kids at home and this is three,
four years after going broke. And so now she's a single mom basically. Um,
but we're, we're going to get financial peace by God.
We're going to get this going. And so, uh, you know,
how do you level up out of that? Well, you, by time management, for one thing,
you got to start working on your business, not just in your business.
So you've got a time block some of your weeks out, some of your hours out of the week and
go, I've got to take care of accounting.
I've got to take care of some SEO.
I've got to take care of stuff that's not just directly related to production of revenue
and collection of revenue.
And this is also when you hire your first people so that you've got someone else to
lift the bales with you.
You're not the only one lifting the bales.
And so you get your first person,
your second person in there, that kind of thing.
So you're building delegation,
you're starting to build time management
and that levels you up
and then you go up to pathfinder we call it.
And pathfinders, you know,
typically the pathfinder has got eight or 10 people,
something like that.
And everybody's working their butt off
and they're going in about, it's like herding cats.
They're going about 92 directions,
trying to nail jello to a tree.
We're all working hard, we're all having fun,
it's a great adventure, we're tired together,
there's not a lot of planning,
there's not a lot of role clarity.
The communication is drive-by communication,
we just would say, hey man, I'm heading out the door,
go get something, and we're just moving. But you start making a little money and the whole thing's not on your back and
You can start leveling up out of that by starting to put mission and vision in place starting to get some role clarity
Look, this is your job. You got to get that done for your work on this other thing
We got to really start to have key result areas some KPIs you start measuring some things
You gotta really start to have key result areas, some KPIs, you start measuring some things, and then you'll level up and you'll go to Trailblazer.
Trailblazer's fun, it's the middle one.
And this is when you actually think you're gonna make it.
You know, we're getting there.
And we actually think we're gonna bust through this thing, and there's a lot happening, but
there's almost no planning.
A lot of it is thank God it's Friday, oh God it's Monday.
And you just go, go, go, go, go again but you don't have good systems, you don't have
good processes.
At this stage at Ramsey we were killing so many trees because we had stuff on paper.
We had 73 spreadsheets trying to time together to create a P&L.
The accounting system sucked and this is Dave P&L, the accounting system sucked. And this is Dave freaking Ramsey,
and the accounting system sucked.
I can't believe it, you know?
But it was like,
because we had all these different business units
and they were all kind of running their own thing,
and then we're trying to get them all to talk
to the mothership, and it was awful.
It was very disorganized, very chaotic.
And so you start really putting in place
something entrepreneurs hate, which is some governance.
And you say, all right, this is the process.
We're all going to adhere to that, because otherwise we're gonna kill each other. putting in place something entrepreneurs hate, which is some governance. And you say, all right, this is the process.
We're all going to adhere to that
because otherwise we're gonna kill each other.
This is the system
and we're gonna do away with the other systems.
You can't have 73 types of software.
This is the one we're using.
And people get mad and they,
oh, you're becoming corporate America now.
No, I'm just trying to keep from going crazy.
And you know, and so, you know,
and you just keep doing that stuff.
And then you'll level up and hit the most, the best one of all, which is peak performer.
This is the best of the five.
Peak performer, man, you got a well-oiled machine, you're bailing cash.
You are making profit like you never thought you'd make in your life.
Things are working.
You start to look good.
People start to want to interview you because you're so smart. You are, you know, people are, you start to wanna interview you because you're so smart.
You are, you know, people are,
you're able to attract talent
because this thing's shiny.
It's working the systems, the processes,
we got good strategic thought.
When I was at the Trailblazer stage,
I couldn't spell strategic, everything was tactical.
But I hired some MBAs accidentally
because I was trying to get some talent on the team
and I don't have an MBA. But these guys guys 100% of the MBA programs teach strategic thought and so
these guys started telling show me the importance of getting above the problem
seeing a 30,000 foot view quit running into the wall Dave if you turn right and
then turn left you can walk around it and burn less calories but you got to
get above it to see the way around the wall. And so it's slow down a little bit, get above it and develop a good map to Florida, right?
And so I always laugh and say,
these wonderful people taught me strategic thought
and I taught them how to work.
So then we move, you know,
so then you get up in this peak performer.
There's only one negative thing about peak performer is,
you can start to believe you're great and slow down and quit iterating
and quit breaking it before it's broken and those are huge mistakes and so the trick at peak
performers shock the monkey baby i mean get the get the cattle prod out just turn the bat turn the
fruit basket over just have emergency meetings mess with people mess with the thing. So we cannot rest here.
We're not as good as we look, what we were saying earlier.
We got big time momentum,
but we're not as good as we look
and we're not gonna fall for this lack of humility,
this hubris that Jim Collins talks about
and how the mighty fall.
This is where they fall
and they get hubris in the peak performer.
And if you can just stay dialed up there,
a lot of companies spend two decades in the peak performer stage, never move out of it,
and just bail money. The last stage then is the stage Ramsey's at, which is the
legacy stage. And that's where you start to think about, okay, how's this go on
generationally? What happens at the end of the founder's life or the end of the
founder's career? How are we going to exit? Are we selling
out? Are we bringing in joint venture capital? Are we going to do an IPO? Are we
going to hand this to the next generation of family? What are we doing?
And you got to start planning and working on a good 15 years succession plan. It
takes a good 15 years to build a solid and execute a good, solid succession plan.
People that do it in 15 days fail because you just toss the keys out as you grab your chest and fall
back into the grave. And so that doesn't work because the customers don't know what's going on,
the vendors don't know what's going on, the team doesn't know what's going on,
and the old man that started it is now 80 and there seems to be no plan.
So it's hard to attract and keep talent.
Who wants to work for that?
Because when he dies, it's going to fold up like a Walmart tent.
And so, you know, we don't want to do this.
And so we started working on ours 16 years ago at Ramsey, and we're deep into it.
And it's troubling emotionally, but it's the noble and the right and the wise thing to
do at the legacy stage
So those are the five stages in a quick rundown and machine gun style and that's what the books about and then there's six
Drivers that run you through those things we talked about one of them a lot the personal driver
My the problem with my business is the guy in my mirror the solution to my business is the guy in my mirror That's the first of the six drivers. And so that's the framework that becomes the clear path that gives you hope.
If you're running something that I can level up at each one of these things,
and it's going to get a little easier and then something else is going to get a
little harder because it's at scale now.
What are your principles and process for finding and hiring good staff?
It seems like that's very important to move people beyond each level and
something that probably a lot of solopreneurs get stuck on.
It's the number one pain point in small businesses is hiring and keeping and
firing, hiring and keeping talent and firing, uh, because small business people
love their people, their family.
Uh, you, you, by the nature of the fact that it is a small business, I know them.
There's, they're not a, a social security number that I can cut to get stock price up. This is somebody I sit and have lunch with. I know their dog's name. I know their kid's name.
You know, and so this is a process to lead these folks in that kind of a setting and to hire them
and attract them. So what you've got to do is you're continually
looking for not only people that have talent,
but people that are on fire for what you're doing.
And we call them crusaders at our place.
And that align with your core values.
It's more important that they align with your core values
and that they're enthusiastic than it is that they have talent. Because if you bring in a
talented player onto a football team and he disrupts the locker room, he takes
more from the team than he adds. He could be a Hall of Famer and still hurt the
team more than he helps the team on the field. Because you know nobody wants to
block for the guy, he's a butt you you know and that's what happens in a business as well so we made the
mistake in business like we did with education I'm saying oh if you have a
piece of paper that's all your that's your qualification you know you've got
the talent you got the certification you've got the degree who cares if
you're a jerk who cares if you sleep around on your wife who cares if you're
doing cocaine?
As long as you do your job and you got the degree,
then that's all we care about.
And that's a huge mistake.
You cannot build a quality culture, a productive culture,
a safe place for people to work with those kinds of people in the room.
Every time we let crazy in our building accidentally,
we find out what door they use and we put a lock on it. with those kinds of people in the room. That, you know, every time we let crazy in our building accidentally,
we find out what door they use and we put a lock on it.
Cause crazy will shut the flight freaking place down.
You burn all your calories dealing with their drama
instead of getting your work done.
And it's like, God, I wish I just had,
didn't have team members.
I wish I had just me, it'd be a lot easier.
Well, yeah, cause sometimes I feel like
I'm running a beauty parlor.
You know, it's just ridiculous.
And so, but that's how small business people feel about it
And how I have felt at times so we just became
Militant about not letting the wrong people in the building
Yeah, you got to have talent but that's secondary to you've got to be aligned
You got to be ready to go and that's why I've got the quality of Gen Zers that I have.
That's why, you know, I told you I got five or 600 of them
that are in their Gen Z and they're fabulous.
They'll charge the gates of hell with a water pistol.
And don't you mess with Ramsey,
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How do you assess, how do you find, assess and motivate people to have that level of passion and buy in?
Uh, I don't motivate them.
Uh, you can't motivate people.
Uh, I, I, I hire motivated people.
And so do you need to incentivize them appropriately?
Yeah.
The, and it's not necessarily money, it's culture.
Give them a place to work.
That's real.
Give them something to work on that is changing people's lives.
That does have meaning.
Give them a, uh, the ability to participate in meaning in, uh, that
kind of stuff and plug into that.
And they'll tell you, they'll tell you upfront.
That's the other thing about Gen Z.
They're just there and millennials too.
They're just brutally honest. They're like, you know, I'm just looking for a job. Uh's the other thing about Gen Z. They're just there and millennials too. They're just brutally honest.
They're like, you know, I'm just looking for a job.
You don't fit in here.
We don't have anybody works at JLB.
Everybody here is on the team to put the ball in the end zone, man.
This is like a passionate thing and you're going to stand out like a sore
thumb if you're mailing it in around here.
Does the importance of building culture in that sort of a way
lend a advantage to businesses like yours
that have a single spot where everybody works?
I don't know whether you have anyone
that does work remotely.
I imagine there must be some contractors somewhere
that have to contribute to tech stuff
and servers and things,
but I imagine that that level of motivation, that level of culture building,
that level of buy-in is significantly harder if you've got a team that's distributed around the world
and never sees each other.
I would suspect it is. I've never run anything like that. I don't know.
But I think your observation is probably correct. It's one of the many reasons that we work at work.
We don't have any team members that are on our payroll
that work anywhere except in this building.
And there's 1,100 of them.
But we do have some contractors and vendors
of different kinds.
Obviously they don't work for me.
They work for themselves somewhere.
I don't know where they work.
It's not my job to keep up with them.
But the people inside the building,
because then we
create this, you know, so much is transferred with body language and tone, so much quality of
communication is. And so when I'm sitting in a meeting, we can have a really constructive
argument, a good fight about a bad idea or a good idea. Now, and not kill the players.
It's two guys in the huddle going,
no, don't run the ball over there.
They've been catching us every day over there.
Let's go up the B hole, and it's to the A hole.
And so, you know, you're just arguing
about the play being called, not the competency
or not the dignity or not the quality of the player.
That's not what, you don't fix that in the huddle, but we get in the room, we do
everything so collaborative and, and we have a healthy level of conflict
continuously around here.
And the longer you've been here and the longer higher in leadership you are, the
more dramatic some of that conflict is to where an outsider visiting that room might be
really confused as to what they were observing. They might not understand how much trust and love
and respect is actually in that room that allows you to talk like that. But I mean, we get at it.
But it's all an act of love because we're all trying to get the same thing done.
And you can argue with me and go, Dave, that's a stupid idea.
Just like I can tell you that same thing and go, but I'm not going to call you
stupid, that's different than saying a stupid idea and navigating that through
a Slack channel, as opposed to person to person, face to face.
Yes.
Yes.
Yes.
Yeah.
Uh, talking about money problems, you know, we, we've touched tactically
on a lot of different things today.
Do you think that money problems are existential problems in disguise?
Is there something deeper going on that it's an outgrowth of something
that somebody's self image, some spiritual issue that they've got going on,
some existential problem, or is it all, does spiritual issue that they've got going on, some existential
problem or is it all, does it all just come down to tactics?
No, it's a hundred percent what you're talking about.
You're exactly right.
Uh, there was a guy on Christian radio when I first started named Larry Burkett.
He's since passed away, but he used to say, uh, money problems are not the problem.
They're the symptom or something else going on.
They, they're the symptom of some extreme thing going on
or some minor thing going on.
Could it be greed?
That's the problem.
And then that's gonna lead you to do what I did,
build a house of cards and it'll fall in on you.
Could it be immaturity?
Could it be I'm trying to prop up a self-image?
Could it be a cocaine addiction? You know,
we've had the honor of walking with a whole lot of people into their sobriety
over the years in a lot of different kinds of addictions and 100% of addicts
have financial trouble eventually. 100%. There's no exception and so I just a matter of time it shows up in the money always and so
But that that's the extreme right, but the you know, the money problems could be from a marriage problem
But they're not so the symptom is not really the fact that we can't get along and so we're doing revenge spending
With our spouse or we're hiding stuff, financial infidelity,
we got six credit cards my husband doesn't know about or my wife doesn't know about,
that kind of stuff. All of that is symptomatic of a broken relationship. It's not the problem,
it's the symptom. And so we all that's, that's one of the reasons the Ramsey show,
overall these 35 years from talk radio to podcast to YouTube now has been so popular.
It's so compelling to watch and listen to it because you're not really getting the financial
question.
You're really getting these people's lives, which are compelling.
I mean, it's like watching a, sometimes like watching a train wreck, you know, and sometimes
it's like watching a victory, a victory dance.
They just won the super bowl, the debt free scream.
Right.
And so all of the, this is a personal visceral victory.
And so that's, that's what's compelling about the show.
It's not that we showed somebody how to do a Roth IRA.
It's personal growth masquerading as a way to make wealth.
It's somebody changing, changing their life.
It's just that finances their particular current bug.
For some other person, it might be their body weight.
For some other person, it might be their marital status.
For some other person, it might be their friendship circle or the
place that they live or whatever.
And this is the vehicle for personal growth.
Dysfunctional family origin, family origin, where they grew up, they just
grew up in a toxic situation raised by wolves
and they don't know how to do it.
And so, um, hey, I understand.
And, uh, you know, I grew up in this neighborhood.
It gave me that mindset.
I grew up in that neighborhood.
It gave me that mindset.
And so, um, you know, the, all of that is in the, in the gumbo and you
stir it and you stir it and you put the spices in and
you keep stirring and you can make some good gumbo, but it takes a minute to get there.
Dave, your analogies are the stuff of fucking legend. Nailing jello to a tree.
It's like a Walmart tent that needs folding up. I just, look, as a Brit,
we just do not have this level of color when it comes to
the, the analogies that we use.
Um, you've mentioned, I've heard you mentioned before money's 80% behavior
and 20% sort of head knowledge.
Why then is it so hard for people to change their financial behavior,
even when they know what to do?
If money is mostly behavior as opposed to knowledge, why do smart people
go broke? Why do people struggle to change if they've got the tactics in front of them?
As soon as they believe that it's going to work, they change. And as soon as they believe
deeply, they change dramatically and scare all of their parents.
Is that hope? Believe as in I can do this thing as opposed to believe in the strategy?
I think if I plant this corn this way, I've never done it before,
I'm actually going to get corn. So I'm going to plant the corn. I think if I, okay,
the debt snowball, I'm going gonna list my debt smallest to largest,
pay minimum payments on everything but the little one,
attack the little one.
It's not mathematically correct.
Well, actually, it technically is, I'll tell you in a minute.
But it's not, what about the highest interest rate?
Shouldn't we pay that off first?
No, you need a win so you believe.
You need to get the locus of control straight.
You need to get a sense of agency,
a sense of I can control the controllables I am actually driving this
bus I am NOT a victim of the culture I can actually control and I can actually
pay this stupid car you pay off a little $500 credit card you go okay that's one
down maybe let's try it again and then you pay off a $1,500 and then boom you
knock out a $3,500 motorcycle payment and then you you know and and then as the
the more that more the proof is in there,
the more they get fired up,
the deeper they sacrifice, the faster they go.
And we all do that.
And probability of completion there is much higher
than the probability of completion
of paying off the highest interest rate first,
because it might take three years before you get a win.
And so when you factor in probability of completion, the
death snowball is mathematically superior to doing it the other way.
But nobody puts in probability completion in the mix.
Psychologically superior.
Right.
And people actually do it.
They don't do the other one.
That's the difference.
Look, I, I've had a number of conversations.
Uh, Richard Dawkins was one of the people that I had this conversation
with, and I tried to explain to him why trying to force people either out of
faith or into whatever worldview it is that he wanted through raw, what he
would consider rationality is fundamentally uncompelling because what you're
telling people to do is to deny the thing that's
most real to them, which is story, narrative,
persona, legend, archetype, and rely on the
thing, which is most unreal to them, which is
statistic probability.
It's I, I, I, we have no sense of that. And I think that you have, I really appreciate the first time I learned about your debt snowball.
You're right.
Mathematically, in raw spreadsheet terms, mathematically suboptimal.
But as soon as you fold the complexity of a human and our motivation system into it,
it makes way more sense.
And again, probability completion.
So as a result.
And so that's the first thing that I learned about your debt snowball. of a human and our motivation system into it, it makes way more sense. And again, probability of completion as a result.
And so that's what it is.
That's why the seven baby steps.
That's why the clear path.
That's why we went back to that same motivation
on the business outline we just did,
was we're still trying to show, okay,
I'm a treadmill operator.
Now, when I'd level up on my time management,
I get my first team member, I get to move to the next level. Oh this is working this is working
I'm gonna I'm gonna work a system I see a believable system and I'm gonna plug
into it. If you go to the gym and you you you run for two hours on a treadmill and
and you change your diet and eat sawdust and, uh, crappy food,
crappy tasting food because it's healthy or whatever.
Uh, and then you gain weight.
You will quit.
You would only do those punishing activities.
If they, unless you're a masochist, you would only do
punishing activities in order to win.
No discipline seems pleasant at the time, but it yields a harvest of righteousness.
Yeah.
Things are going to be hard, but you can do hard things the hard way
or hard things, the easy way.
And, uh, trying to, he says, choose your heart.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
He does.
He does among many other things.
Uh, what about people who sort of self sabotage their wealth once they achieve it?
You know, somebody's finally reached something approximating escape velocity
and stuff's comfortable.
What have you found from all of the people that you've spoken to, your studies?
Why do people end up tumbling back down?
Most of the time it's because they believe wealth is morally reprehensible.
it's because they believe wealth is morally reprehensible. It's a cognitive dissonance to engage in something you believe to be wrong. It's not sustainable.
Humans won't continually engage in things over a long
period of time in things they morally believe to be wrong, even if it's quote
unquote profitable. And so if you have bought into the wealth is evil or the
wealthy or bad people or crooks or whatever and then you become one, how do I handle this dissonance
in my brain, this disconnect in my brain? Well, I have to self-sabotage is what ends up happening.
And so and they'll even do stuff like, you know, sometimes I'll see wealthy people and we
all know the names, they say, well, I'm not leaving my children any wealth.
What that says is that I did something wrong and I wouldn't do that to
my kids. Wealth is evil so why would I put it with my children? And that's
usually where that comes from. It's the same thing. It falls in that same bucket. And so I guess there could be other psychological things that we'd have to ask Deloney or somebody
with a PhD in counseling, but in my mind, you know, pop psychology, there's probably a
sense of I'm not worthy that might be a secondary reason of I don't feel like I earned this,
because everyone has a sense of a turtle in a fence post when you
get there. If you see a turtle on a fence post we know two things. One is it's a curious site and
two is he didn't get there by himself and so you have that sense of I didn't get here by myself
and I must you know and so I owe some kind of debt to society and because I'm not personally confident or worthy now if you get there with a healthy
Self-image you say I had a lot of help. I had some good folks help me
I got a few breaks. I had God blessing me
I'm not completely responsible, but I'm also partially responsible because I'm actually the one that did this stuff
And so you don't take 100% credit,
but you don't try to cast off and take no credit.
That's a good, healthy mental state when you get there.
And those people don't self-sabotage.
But if you feel like you did something wrong
or you feel like I owe a debt back to society
because the society gave this to me.
I didn't do anything.
I'm unworthy of this.
Then you have to somehow disband the thing.
Is it interesting?
We went from greed is good to wealth is bad in some circles.
What, what, what an arc.
Um, what do you think about how social media distorts our understanding of wealth
and success and what we should have by a certain age?
It's a serious problem. In the old days, there was a book out called Afluenza,
and they could track the amount of television you watched. In other words, the advertisements
that you consumed, the more hours of television you watched, the more credit card debt you had,
and the more overspending you did.
Today, you can take that with an exponential factor
in the social media.
Much more powerful.
Yeah, it's much more powerful.
It's much more, the influencer role, so to speak,
is not as commercial, it's not as in your face.
It's much more subtle.
And the influence that it has of people putting
their highlight reels of their life on Instagram.
No one puts crappy stuff about their life on Instagram,
right?
Real children don't look like those kids.
I mean, really, seriously.
I mean, where did you get those stepford children?
And my children were never that clean all at once.
How did you pull that off?
You know, you're looking at these pictures going, who are these people?
And I mean, no one ever says, oh, my husband just got me a 1994 Honda Accord and we're
debt free, hashtag blessed.
You know, no one does that, right?
And so, but so it's all this highlight reel,
it's not real.
And it's interesting to me,
the word that we use for it is it's virtual,
which literally means not real.
And yet we treat it in our psyche as if it's real.
And so then we get this idea that,
oh, well, because of Chip and Joanna,
everyone can fix a house up. No honey, you'll
hurt your hand with that hammer. Not everybody can fix a house up. You're going to cut your
finger off with that saw. Do not do that. And so not everyone needs to be touching these power tools.
But it's a facade. I mean, it's not real. It's like walking through a Hollywood set and you walk through the front door of a
house and there's nothing back there.
Uh, it's not real.
And, uh, that's the problem with it is it's peddling a lie.
And then you, your psyche knows that your intellect knows that, but your
psyche buys it anyway.
And then based on that, I hit, um, uh, you know, put stuff in the cart and hit submit.
I hit, you know, put stuff in the cart and hit submit.
Going back to some of the trends that we've seen, both on social media and also,
I think, some of the anti-wealth or money negative perspectives of sort of the modern world, the classic middle management position that
takes up a big chunk of people who are helping, you know, some medium
sized business, the average American working an average job.
Uh, do you think that that middle management position, the average
one now earns enough is the cost of living crisis, uh, spending
crisis or an earning crisis?
Um, it's probably both, but the solution is to understand
when people look at that and frame something up
the way we're talking about there,
it's not an accurate portrayal of life
because all we're doing is taking a snapshot in the moment.
And if you'd taken a snapshot of me right before I filed
bankruptcy, right after I filed bankruptcy, I mean and said okay we're
gonna analyze the economy based on the macro economy based on where Dave sits
right now. I mean he's a college graduate, he's a father of two, he's 28 years old
and look at where he is. that snapshot was would give you zero hope
but snapshots aren't how life works life is a film strip it's a series of
snapshots strung together and next frame something's different better or worse
the next frame something's different better or worse the next frame and so
the film keeps running and so that guy in middle management is not there for 40 years. He didn't get there and stay
exactly in that place and never move. That average American doesn't stay
there. They move around. I mean, the average person now has 14 positions
before they retire. So he's not gonna be there. We know that. And here's the thing, I'll run some numbers sometimes.
I'll say, okay, if you saved 15% of your household income
and you had an average household income of $70,000
and you run it out and you did that for 14, 15, 20 years,
whatever, you'd have $7 million in your 401k, okay?
You just run the compound interest out
on the average household income, saving 15% of their income. It's easily north of five million dollars.
And I'm like, but that is based on the fact that over that 15 years, a guy never got a raise.
So he started at average and for 15 years never got a raise, which by definition is a loser.
How do you start at average and not go up at all? I mean, by definition.
So this is not how humans work.
They go down, they go up, they go down, they go up.
But there's an overall trajectory of up.
Very few Americans in their career making
less than they made at the beginning of their career.
You take a 35 or a 40-year career path and you go,
okay, in and out of jobs,
in and out of careers maybe change complete directions but at the end at
the at the apex of my life when I'm at my maximum earning potential am I making
less than I did when I was 22 years old and I just got out of school? No. Almost
zero. You can't find them. I mean now you could have the exception of be a medical
problem you could have all these of being a medical problem.
You could have all these other things. But I'm talking about just in general terms,
that's a fairly easy set of assumptions. So bottom line is if you're in your 20s and houses are too
expensive because interest rates are 6% and your wages haven't kept up with what the boomer curve
was, which are all accurate mathematical statements. You'll be okay.
Cause when you're 30, it's going to be different.
It's going to be different rates will be up or they'll be down.
House prices will be up.
Your income is going to change.
And I don't know what the average income is going to change, but your
income is going to change a hundred percent.
Your income is going to change.
And can you outpace, can you personally outpace the fact that wages haven't kept up?
Well, I did and you did.
So, uh, and John Delaney did and other people do, and we do it all the time.
So go do that.
That's your thing.
Are you familiar with a guy called Gary Stevenson?
It's Gary's economics on YouTube.
I'm sorry.
I don't keep up with things the way I should.
I'm going to, uh, I'm going to send it over once we're done.
I would love for you to have a look at, at this guy, British guy.
He was a trader.
Uh, I want to say for Goldman, I can't remember where he was, but he was one of
the, one of the top traders for a while at Goldman, um, and is now campaigning
from a very aggressive left-leaning perspective in the UK for super
high taxes on high net worth individuals.
And he's talking, he's talking like 20 million to 50 million and above.
He's particularly trying to target billionaires, non-domy people that are able to come and not
pay tax on their global stuff.
But he is on fire in the UK.
Every video that he puts up on his YouTube channel is a million to two million plays.
Every debate that he does, he's on BBC News, Channel 4's Newsnight, he's on BBC Question Time.
And I would be, I'd be very interested, I would be fascinated to try and work out a way to get you and him to have a sit
down and have a discussion to see what America versus the UK.
Cause a lot of people in the UK now have this perspective.
I think it's a, an outgrowth of pain.
It's an outgrowth of expectations, not necessarily being met.
Cost of living is very bad there.
Lots of unemployment, especially among people under the age of 25, which you
may have seen, and then a very different sort of message coming from the other side of the pond.
But I'll send you some stuff to have a look at.
I think you'd be very fascinated to see what's going on in the UK at the moment.
Sure. It sounds like a quintessential argument just between capitalism and socialism.
I mean, John Maynard Keynes was British, obviously, and Keynesian economics, you know, came in
with FDR and was arguably, some people say one of the things that turned America around
out of the Great Depression was government spending and taxing the rich to do that.
And so the Keynesian economic mentality has now invaded all of the American colleges as
well.
I was taught it as fact, as opposed to Adam Smith, free market, uh, you know,
capitalism is fact.
Um, but I had good critical thinking skills and so I've gone past that and I
don't, I think John Maynard Keynes was a moron.
Um, and so I really have no use for that.
He's saying that the British don't have a, an illustrious history of providing you
with, uh, well, not that guy. I mean, I don't, I'm for all I know, Adam Smith might have been in British. I don't have an illustrious history of providing you with.
Well, not that guy.
I mean, for all I know, Adam Smith might have been British.
I don't know.
But he probably was.
But the father of capitalism.
But it's not about Brits.
That's not for me.
I mean, I don't have a problem at all with that.
But it's just a matter of, okay, do we believe
that government run
and government maintained lifestyles give us the answer?
And the truth of the matter is
is that probably in America today,
the little man, the guy starting from nothing,
has a better chance of building wealth
because of the freedoms and the ease
of access to the markets, the ease of access to information. If he has drive or she has
drive and has two brain cells to rub together, you probably have a better chance of becoming
wealthy in America today starting from nothing and in any place at any time in history. And
it wasn't because we
took it from someone else and gave it to you it's because you have access to go
get it and that's the difference that's the difference in the mentality it
sounds like I don't know I don't know this guy at all you're talking about so
I'd be interested to look at it yeah it'd be fun Dave Ramsey ladies and
gentlemen Dave you're awesome I knew that I was gonna enjoy today but you
exceeded my expectations.
So.
You too, brother.
I've heard big things about you guys.
You're blowing up.
I'm so proud of y'all.
Anything we can do to help you let us know.
Well, I think John has demanded that we do dinner
at some point soon in Nashville.
So perhaps I'll, I mean, it's only two hours from Austin.
So I'll jump on a plane and I'll see you guys soon.
That would be great.
I demand to be included.
Uh-huh. Uh- included. Uh-huh.
Uh-huh.
Uh-huh.
New book, tell everyone where you can get, where they can get your new book.
Oh, anywhere it's a build a business you love and you can get it at
ramseysolutions.com, but it's in all the books, you know, Amazon, wherever
you want it, it's everywhere.
Heck yeah.
Dave, I really appreciate you.
Thank you, man.
Thank you, man.
It's a lot of fun.
Thanks.
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