The School of Greatness - 943 Robert Kiyosaki: How to Become Wealthy in a Down Economy (The Rich Dad Poor Dad Guide)
Episode Date: April 20, 2020“Some people are looking for the challenge, some are looking for security.”QUESTIONSWhat were some wake moments for you as an entrepreneur? (1:25)Can one get rich without being bold? (11:28)What�...�s the next step to get through this pandemic market? (16:18)What does “define benefit” mean? (40:51)What’s your projection of real estate right now? (48:17)YOU WILL LEARNWhat Robert learned from his first big success and failure (6:42)How young people have a lot of opportunity due to the pandemic (14:21)The three types of people in this world (18:15)The difference between peacetime and wartime leaders (24:13)Robert’s feelings about the stock market (28:10)What the pandemic is doing to the economy (36:18)LINKS MENTIONEDWho Stole My Pension?Rich Dad Poor DadCashflow Classic GamePatrick Bet-DavidGeorge GammonThe Creature from Jekyll Island by G. Edward GriffinInvestment Biker by Jim RogersDave RamseyAntifragile by Nasium TalebIf you enjoyed this episode, show notes and more at http://www.lewishowes.com/943 and follow at instagram.com/lewishowes
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This is episode number 943 with international best-selling author Robert Kiyosaki.
Welcome to the School of Greatness.
My name is Lewis Howes, a former pro-athlete turned lifestyle entrepreneur.
And each week we bring you an inspiring person or message to help you discover how to unlock your inner greatness.
Thanks for spending some time with me today. Now let the
class begin. Steve Jobs said, if today were the last day of your life, would you want to do what
you're about to do today? I love that question and quote because it gets you thinking.
It gets you thinking about where you're at in your life,
where you want to be in your life,
and if you are in the right direction of your dreams,
of your goals, of your desired future self,
your greater future self.
Are you doing what you want to do today?
Yes, there are going to be tasks and things that you don't want to do.
I don't want to do everything that I do every minute of the day.
But are you, in general, happy with the things you're doing?
And are you excited about them?
Are you uplifted by it all?
Or are you down and out and constantly frustrated and depressed and unhappy and unsatisfied?
If so, take inventory.
Start making the changes.
being unsatisfied? If so, take inventory, start making the changes. And I'm so glad you're here today to learn how to make some changes in your financial situation in a down economy or really
any type of economy, but how to optimize this situation. We've got one of the icons in this
space, Robert Kiyosaki, to share his wisdom and his personal perspective. He's an entrepreneur, investor, motivational speaker, author,
and also financial knowledge activist.
And his book series, Rich Dad, Poor Dad, is an international bestseller
and has been sold all over the world in massive amounts.
It is a comparison between his two dads.
One was his poor biological father and the other fictitious rich dad. The poor father
was in fact very educated but had no money and the rich father was a high school dropout and was in
fact Hawaii's richest man. He's got a new book out which is called Who Stole My Pension and How You
Can Stop the Looting. And in this interview, we talk about his talks,
about his toughest lessons learned in business from experience,
lessons that are hard to teach unless you live through them,
the importance of choosing your teachers wisely to come out on top of a financial crisis,
the difference between wartime and peacetime leaders and business owners,
and why this is
the best time to make money despite what most people are thinking right now.
Yes, this is the best time to make money.
We also discussed some of the biggest companies that were started between 2008 to 2010 recession
and some advice Robert has about business in contrast to some of the popular business
leaders today.
I'm excited about this one.
Robert has a unique perspective.
He has his opinions, his advice that's worked for him.
It's not for everybody.
There are other people out there you can learn from, but this is definitely one opinion that
has done extremely well in his perspective.
And I'm super excited if you'd be a part of this.
If you love Robert, if you're a fan of his books, then make sure to share this episode
with a friend, lewishouse.com slash 943.
Subscribe to the School of Greatness podcast and leave us a review.
I'm so glad you're here and pumped to get into this episode.
Let's dive in with the one, the only Robert Kiyosaki.
Welcome everyone to the School of Greatness podcast.
We've got the legend, Robert Kiyosaki, in the house.
Thank you so much for being here.
Super excited about this.
Well, thank you.
People say I'm a legend in my own mind, you know.
And my reply is, you may as well be a legend in your own mind
because you're not a legend in anybody else's mind.
Hey, you got to believe in yourself if you want to create great things in the world.
At least you've got to believe.
It's almost 25 years now, Rich Dad, Poor Dad, right?
Are you sick and tired of talking about Rich Dad, Poor Dad?
Or is it still something you enjoy talking about?
No, that's kind of what we were talking about.
This is what I'm supposed to have done anyway.
You know, it was, so I got on my path
yes and what I was saying what you and I were talking about before we started I meet a lot of
guys who something tragic happens in their life but it was the best thing ever happened to them
like I had a friend who was a olympic snowboarder and he did one of those goofy things those guys do and he shattered his body
oh and nobody could heal him so he became an acupuncturist and the guy's greatest he found
this real gift it's not snowboarding or whatever he was doing is he's a healer and he uses acupuncture you know and he heals people he's unbelievably good but if he
hadn't crashed he wouldn't be where he is today yeah what was the big tragedy in your life oh
there's every other every other day this day what was the big tragedies what was like the big aha
moments where something bad had to happen for you to say oh let me wake up and take down
this path oh there's a lot of i mean i really was uh as an entrepreneur uh my biggest failure was
that i was i was successful in my first venture and i was this is i don't know i was about 25
years old and i started a nylon and bronco surfer wallet business everybody said well why
why are you doing that i said well i don't know what else to do you know right and i used to make
nylon well i went to school in new york at a military school a sailing school so i used to
sell these nylon wallets out of sales so when we're looking for an idea for a product and the
product sucks the product doesn't really count. I just needed to start a business.
So I was working at Xerox at the time in Honolulu and I gave my, I showed this little wallet to my
two partners, two criminals, but anyway. So we came up with these nylon wallets. We had them manufactured
in Korea and nobody would buy them.
So I have a hundred thousand wallets in a warehouse in New York.
I'm in Hawaii and my friend and I are going door to door trying to sell these to no way. And everybody kept saying, do you shit me?
What are you guys doing?
And what happened was because we failed at the wallet business,
I was sitting in our offices in Honolulu, and somebody says,
hey, jogging had just started.
Baby boomers are first getting into hell.
And they started jogging.
They had the Nike waffle and all these other good shoes.
And so this guy in Golden Gate Park goes for a jog.
He didn't know what to do with his key,
so he put his key on top of his car tire. And he went for a run, and guess what? He came back and his car was gone.
Wow.
And so the headline says, San Francisco Times, what does a jogger do with their key? And I went,
oh my God. So since I have kind of a quasi-engineering background, I designed with a
hook and tear method and built the shoe pocket that went on a
runner's shoe so i had this nylon wallet not had a runner's shoe i mean a shoe pocket so i go around
the world again so i'm going we're going broke so fast you know we had no money we just kept
borrowing money raising capital but it was all good because i was learning how to raise capital
yeah so finally we're desperate we buy a full days, it took four months for an ad to come out.
So we had to shoot this stupid shoe pocket on a New Balance 320 shoe.
And we get it into Runner's World magazine.
I think it cost me $16,000.
Oh, my gosh.
That's a lot of money.
And then we waited for the phone to ring.
So we had to wait until, like, January, February, March.
And the phone didn't ring.
So we want to quit.
We're out of money.
You know, can't pay the rent.
The repo at my car.
And it was getting so bad.
So let's get one more shot, just one more shot.
So we go to New York City at the Sporting Goods Show at the Coliseum.
And I'm sitting at my booth in the basement because that's all I could afford.
And this guy goes walking past and he goes, my company must be called Rippers.
So I'm putting my big sign up, Rippers.
And he goes, Rippers, Rippers, where have you been?
And I turn around and I said, I'm here.
No, no, no, no, no.
He says, where have you been?
I'm like, what do you mean?
He says, I saw your ad.
I said, good.
My store is filled with people coming in looking for the shoe pocket.
Wow.
I said, call me.
That's what I said.
I asked him, why didn't you call me?
He says, you idiot.
You don't have your address or phone number on the ad.
Oh, my goodness.
Wow.
And then what happened is Playboy put a pic, you know,
they featured this young thing with nothing on but a shoe pocket.
And our sales went, I looked like a genius.
But this went broke.
We couldn't keep up with demand.
Wallets took off.
Shoe pockets took off.
We were borrowing and borrowing and borrowing just to finance inventory.
We were shipping all over the world.
And we went broke because I kept raising money.
And one day, but we were already like $850,000 in debt, which was a lot of money back then.
Wow.
That's a lot of money right now.
Yeah, well, it's relative.
Anyway, so I go back to my partner, Stanley, the accountant, the CPA, the CFO.
And I said, how much more do I have to raise?
He says, I think $100,000 will do.
I said, good.
So I go raise another $100,000, right?
So I hand the check to Stanley because he couldn't, you know, accountants can't sell.
So I give him $100,000. He says, well, let's take care of the problem and stanley said yes he took care of his problem he paid off his he paid off his investors oh so we're
still broke we had no money stanley hits the road and that's how it went down stealing stanley i
love that guy he did me the biggest favor of all.
You know what I mean?
I learned so much, man.
What was the greatest lesson you learned from that big success slash failure?
Well, just because they're smart doesn't mean they're not dishonest or crook.
And I've run into more crooks.
I think I hired them intentionally.
Until you learned your lesson, right?
No, no.
Every entrepreneur I've talked to
have had somebody steal from you know i i go to my doctor
and this little cute little cutie working for him this beautiful young woman you know
sweet as everybody loved her and so one day i went say well where is she and he was
you know where is she well what did, because she's tech savvy,
she rigged the invoicing on their computer.
So, you know, like 90% went to the doctor and 10% went to her.
Wow.
And so she heisted.
I said, that little sweetheart?
He goes, smart.
And then so he called the police.
And this is the interesting part.
Her father was already a rich guy.
And he comes in and says, I'll pay you anything.
Just don't send her to jail.
Wow.
So then that was the next thing you'll learn.
Is it better to send her to jail or take the money?
Wow.
So she's in jail.
No, no, she's not.
What?
What I'm saying is you can't teach that stuff.
Yeah, you got to experience it.
You got to go through it.
Yeah, it's right in front of you all the time.
Man, what's the lesson you've learned in the last two to three years
that you thought you'd already learned that you, you keep learning that comes the hard way.
Is there anything that you still learn or have you seen at all?
No,
it's,
it's,
as you know,
a rich dad,
poor dad is a story of my rich dad who had no education,
but he grew up in business for real.
You know,
he took over the family business at 13.
So he kind of grew up in the real world of money. My rich dad was a PhD.
Poor and helpless and desperate.
Went to Stanford and Northwestern.
Very smart guy, good guy and all this.
But as you know, teachers don't know shit.
They teach stuff they don't know nothing about.
Right.
Well, some of them are forced to teach that, right? Some of them try to educate in other ways and inspire don't defend them don't
defend them i don't like them anyway you know what happens when do i get in the most trouble
is when i criticize going to school because to many people it's their only hope and salvation
yeah so if i say well i don't think school teaches you much,
I may as well piss on the Pope.
You know, they say, it's not a religion.
If you don't go to school, and then atonement, well, you know,
Steve Jobs dropped out.
He did pretty good.
Yeah.
Gates dropped out.
Dell dropped out.
Zuckerberg.
Zuckerberg dropped out.
Henry Ford.
Walt Disney.
They didn't hurt.
So anyway, education is religion to most people.
So that's why I step on toes and I get dumped.
What did Mark Twain's quote say?
Like, don't let schooling get in the way of your education or something like that.
And one of the reasons why I started the School of Greatness,
I was telling you before we started recording,
is that I was in the special needs classes literally every day for as long as I can remember. Since kindergarten until seventh year in college, I had a tutor.
I was in the special needs classes with a few kids who had learning disabilities.
And it was the most challenging thing for me because I wish they would have taught me things that I'm learning now.
because I wish they would have taught me things that I'm learning now.
And the reason I created the School of Greatness,
because I was like, what are the things I wish they would have taught me in school to help me get ahead in my finances, to help me get ahead in my health,
my mindset, my, you know, how to deal with a breakup in a relationship,
a tragic time, like the emotional side of things,
the education that I wish they would have taught us.
I was like, I'm going to go create it.
I'm going to find people like Robert and teach us the ways.
So, you know, you're doing that through your work,
and I'm trying to do that,
but I think there's people trying to do good by educating
outside of the traditional school system
where I think they're more limited.
Right.
And that's why I created the Cash Flow board game
is because I learned about money playing. I learned about money playing more limited. Right. And that's why I created the cash flow board game is because I learned about
money playing monopoly.
Yeah.
I learned more about life playing monopoly than I did in four years of
college.
Yeah.
I went to a really good school, you know, the best schools in the world,
US Merchant Academy.
I came out a rich man, but it didn't teach me much about money.
I was only a high paid employee.
Yeah.
So then I joined the Marine Corps.
Then I have two professions.
I can fly for United Airlines or I could sail for Standard Oil.
I didn't want to either
because it wasn't challenging anymore.
I think if there's a lesson
is that I'm looking for the challenge
and some people are looking for security.
They're two different people.
They're extremely different people. They're extremely different people.
Yeah, and you talk about rich favors the bold,
those that are willing to take risks and willing to put themselves out there.
Do you think you can get rich without taking risks and being bold
and taking these big chances?
Or can you keep this security mindset and really gain true wealth?
Well, many people have.
You look at Cuomo and all those guys.
They were born rich kids from their father.
Right.
Trump could have taken that path too.
He was born a rich kid.
So I think it's either an entrepreneur or you're not.
Right.
I think that's the difference.
You know what's interesting?
I never thought I was an entrepreneur until I had a big wake-up
call, a tragic experience. And it was kind of like a perfect storm. I didn't know how to make a
dollar. I was not like selling baseball cards. I didn't do the lemonade stand. I didn't try to
hustle all this stuff as a kid. I literally maybe made a little bit of money in the summers just
because my dad put me to work. And I had this dream of playing professional football. And then I made 250 bucks a week.
My dad got in a tragic car accident. He was in a coma for three months.
I didn't have a college degree. It was 2008. The economy went down. I was living on my sister's
couch. She was feeding me. I was making no money. I was living off three credit cards with student loans.
And I didn't have my dad as that kind of financial safety net anymore because he wasn't able to help me and bail me out.
So it was more like, what do I do?
No one was hiring people with degrees at that time, even master's degrees.
I didn't even get a bachelor's degree yet.
And I was just like, how do I survive?
didn't even get a bachelor's degree yet and I was just like how do I survive so I don't think if the worst thing in my life would have happened I wouldn't be here learning how to be hungry how
to like say I need to go survive right now and take chances so I think I think that perfect
storm mentality made me into this survivor creative creative mindset, willing to risk it all.
Whereas if I had my father to kind of protect me financially or say,
because he was like, you're going to take over the business,
you're going to come work for me.
And that was my mindset.
When he kind of left emotionally and mentally, he's still alive today,
but not the same from the brain trauma.
It made me step up as a human being, as a 24-year-old,
and say, I got to learn some
stuff. And that's what I say to young people today. Look at this pandemic, this coronavirus
pandemic. It's really tragic because it attacks the old guys. But even worse is that baby boomers
had it the easiest of all generations. But now their pensions are gone. Their 401ks are gone.
Social security is broke. Medicare is broke. So I say to younger people, this pandemic,
this crisis is the best thing that ever happened to you. You know, you think about that iPhone,
you have more power in that iPhone than I had with my Sparrow Univac mainframe computer.
And then so when I meet people,
they say, oh, the economy is bad.
I said, the only economy is between this year and that year.
There's an economy out here.
But this is the best time for your generation
because you're tech savvy.
I'm not tech savvy.
This was made for you guys.
The old guys like me are being cleaned out by the pandemic.
Unless you have a lot of assets that are bringing you in cash.
The way is clear for you.
Now, the old guys are gone.
They're dead.
What are you going to do about it?
So it's really a great time, but exactly as you were talking about,
the bad times are leading to the best times.
That's it.
If you can see it.
But unfortunately, as you know, there's a lot of,
your generation are younger.
They'll never recover.
Yeah.
They're going to see it
as the worst of times.
I know.
And they're going to,
they're going to reflect back
to this in five years
and 10 years
and say,
that's the thing
that screwed me up
or hurt me
and be a victim to it
as opposed to saying,
okay,
this is happening
and how can I make
the most of it?
And what's it going to take
for me to learn a new skill
or get more creative or be hungrier in this time?
Or more important, who's your teachers?
Who are you listening to?
Well, you know, that's why I keep saying to the millennials,
you know, they're a pack of wimps.
I meet millennials who are just horrifyingly weak.
They're taught trigger events.
I don't know what they say today,
but they've got to have special rooms
where there's no whatever.
I'm going, holy mackerel.
Welcome to the real world.
And there's other millennials
who are as tough as nails.
I mean, this is the biggest opportunity
they've ever had.
Huge.
So it just depends upon
what's between this year and this year and what's in the heart.
Yeah.
What do you think is the next step,
the first step or the number one step
for the average person with, you know,
kind of the normal job that they might be losing,
they have some debt, they got some credit card,
what's the next step for them to not only survive
but thrive in this market in this time
well i always say quit your job but that's not you know i don't have a job i've only had one job
and i never wanted a job after that because i had to be hungry not to say you know but we're all
different we're humans we're different beings if i show you this diagram here, it's why I created my
cash flow board game.
Because we have four different intelligences.
We have mental intelligence.
We have, I don't know what that one is,
physical intelligence.
You probably have very good physical to make
all and all that. Emotional
intelligence, but spiritual intelligence.
So I went to military
school in New York. The first thing is
spiritual. I become a Marine.
It's spiritual.
You know what I mean? Because you're putting your life
on the freaking line.
So Nazim Taleb,
and I wrote the book, The Black Swan.
He also wrote
Anti-Fragile. He says there's three kinds of people
in the world. There's fragile.
And that's what our school systems are putting out. Fragile, and that's your choice.
You want to be that way? Have a good life. The second type
is that, so a fragile is like a champagne flute.
You hit it, it shatters. Then the second one is called robust,
and a robust person is like the rock.
You can pound on them dump on them yeah they
take it but that's all they do they take it and that anti-fragile is somebody like you where they
pound the crap out of you and you get smarter and better because of it. So I love Nassim Taleb. A lot of people call him Dr. Doom.
But the way I look at this whole thing, this economy,
we're probably going into a depression.
We're not going to get out of this.
Really?
Oh, yeah.
And so the thing is, is this good for you or bad for you?
I'm looking forward to it.
The last crash was 2008, and I made more money in 2008 than in my whole life
so this one here 2000 you know what is it 2020 i'm gonna get even richer but i'm gonna get poor
and if they're baby boomers they're gonna blame it on this coronavirus oh my health you know that
hey hit the road put on some running shoes change your your diet. Get some sunlight. You know, get healthy.
Don't be a wimp.
But, oh, no, I'm so afraid of dying.
I'm going, you're already dead.
You don't even know it yet.
You know, in the Marine Corps, you know, in the Marine Corps,
we used to call them corpse people.
Right.
Corpse, not core, yeah.
A corpsman.
No, a corpsman.
A corpsman is a person who's dead but doesn't know it.
Wow.
They're so afraid of dying, they're already dead.
Yeah, it's about taking action, taking control of your life,
taking control of your health, your finances, everything.
This is the best time to be alive right now.
I did an interview with Dave Ramsey last week,
and he said the last three or four recessions or down economies,
whatever you
want to call it, crashes. He said, I made more money during those times than I do in good times.
So I'm hearing him say that. I'm hearing you say that. How did you make more money then? And how
are you planning to turn this into an opportunity to make more money now for you? What are the
things that the actual like action steps? Is it investing more in the stock market? Is it real estate? Is it buying other assets? What does
that look like for you? Dave Ramsey says live debt-free. When the market crashed in 2008,
guess how much money I borrowed? A lot. 300 million. No way. From private investors,
the bank, or how does that work? Because interest rates were dropping and real estate prices were
going to the toilet. And when I walk into my my banker this is what rich dad poured out about rich dad poured
out about a financial statement income statement balance sheet statement of cash flow it's a book
on accounting people don't even know it's a book on accounting so i walked into my bank with my
partner and had all this property that was floating to the surface and i say i'll take
them off your hands i just give it give me the money to buy the property wow that's cojones 300 million give me the money and
i'll buy your properties for you that's crazy so it depends and this is my whole thing i am now
700 million almost a billion in debt really you know why because i don't pay any taxes the more
debt i have the less tax i pay and the average't pay any taxes. The more debt I have,
the less tax I pay.
And the average guy goes,
how do you do that?
Because you have bad teachers.
And so it's this whole thing
that you got to choose
your teachers wisely.
That's why I wrote the book,
Fake, Fake Money,
Fake Teachers, Fake Assets.
I don't touch that garbage
that Wall Street puts out.
I don't have a 401k.
I don't have stocks,
bonds, mutual funds, ETFs.
Doesn't mean you shouldn't, but I don't
need them.
The other part is,
look, for you young guys, the best
teachers are not in colleges. The best teachers
are on YouTube.
The best teachers are on YouTube.
Wake up.
This guy, George Gammon, he's fantastic.
Patrick Bet-David, fantastic.
Jim Rickards. The fake teachersDavid, fantastic. He's great.
The fake teachers are in colleges.
They're telling you to get a job.
Right.
The corporate ladder.
You know, Patrick Bet-David said it the best, and I love that guy.
He says there's two kinds of leaders, wartime and peacetime.
And a peacetime leader is a guy like my poor dad.
He goes to all the right schools.
He has all the pedigrees, the. He goes through all the right schools. He has all the pedigrees and credentials.
He does all the right things.
He climbs the corporate or the government ladder and all that.
Or a wartime leader goes to war.
So Jobs, Steve Jobs, a wartime leader.
I'm a wartime leader.
The difference is I went to war.
I went to war twice on the front lines.
And what happened, so I joined the Marine Corps.
I got a flight school in Pensacola.
I learned to fly.
I got to Camp Pendleton.
I strapped on my weapons.
I got to advance weapons in Camp Pendleton.
I got to Okinawa.
And then they sent me into Vietnam.
And I came out of Vietnam about four months later,
back to restage in Okinawa.
And I thought everybody had changed.
I looked at the fellow Marines, and I thought they were pussies.
And it wasn't that they were pussies.
I had been to war.
You got tougher.
You got stronger.
It's different.
When somebody's trying to kill you, every single mission, I went down three times.
No way.
Yeah.
And I came back stronger and tougher.
So I come back to Okinawa.
I got like a week off, and they're going to ship me back into Vietnam again.
I said, what happened to these guys?
And it wasn't that they changed.
I changed.
So what happens to entrepreneurs who go out and they get their hands handed to them,
and they survive, if you survive, you see the world differently.
So that's what happened to you when you get injured
and all this yeah you see a different world whereas um who's climbing the corporate ladder
right now they just lost their job they're sucking their thumb you know this is the worst time for
yet for a wartime leader they're excited they're excited about it yeah it's the best of times
yeah if you're an entrepreneur right now the world's open to you you're an employee
your world's dead to you what did yeah an entrepreneur can create their own success
yeah see watch patrick beck david you know he's great later peacetime later which one are you
so this is the best of times for the wartime guys horrible time peacetime right and for the people
that are the wartime people,
what is the best advice you would give them now for the next year or two years to capitalize on how do they make more money,
how do they make their millions during this time?
What would you suggest?
You can't make money now.
You should hang it up.
I tell all you freaking millennials, man.
I don't know where it is.
I got this iPhone.
If you can't make money with that, hang it up.
You know, like we used to say, hang up the jockstrap.
You're not going to beat the team.
You can't make money with an iPhone through social media,
through marketing.
You have the world at your fingertips and you can't make money.
The problem is between this year and this year.
It's not out here.
It's in here.
That's why you've got to choose your teachers wisely.
So let me just say it again.
The best teachers are on YouTube.
So is the best porno.
Take up your mind.
Make up your mind what you want to listen to.
So I'm just being real to you.
I hear you, man.
I hear you.
What's the best investment people can make then to capitalize on this opportunity?
Is the investment in education?
Left ear.
Look, if you're poor right now, it was called look in the mirror.
That's what Rick always said to me.
He says, if you're looking in the mirror right now and you see a loser, that's what you are.
You can't make money in this economy.
You've got to change your thinking.
You know, hindsight is 20-20, as they say.
If you're looking, you know, you don't have any money,
you don't have a job, your boyfriend or girlfriend has left you,
and suddenly it goes, well, how did I get here?
How did I get here?
There was a great book called you know Gulag
Archipelago by Sultza Natsan. So he gets thrown in this in a concentration camp or a gulag
in Siberia and he says how did I get here? You know how he got there? Because he was a peacetime leader. Didn't fight back. So people are being sold the
bill, go to school, get a job, pay taxes, save money, get out of debt, buy a house as an asset,
and invest for the long term in a well-defined portfolio of stocks, bonds, mutual funds,
and ETFs. And I do none none of that and why do you recommend
the opposite because i don't have to do that crap that's that's kool-aid go to school go to school
what do they teach you about money nothing get a job you pay the highest taxes pay your taxes i
don't pay taxes get out of debt well debt money is debt after 1971 if you know your history of money.
Your house is not an asset.
Your house is a liability.
And why would I invest for the long term in the stock market when I can make my own assets?
I don't need the stock market.
I'm not saying you shouldn't.
But I create my own assets.
I create my own cash flow.
Every day I can –
You mean through your business, through your creativity?
I'm an entrepreneur.
Yeah.
Most people are employees.
They're looking for jobs.
I'm just looking for.
So like right now.
Should entrepreneurs invest in the stock market?
Do you think if you're entrepreneurial, you should invest in?
Look, find a stupid teacher who's going to tell you what to do.
I'm asking your opinion.
I'm curious as a teacher.
I don't give advice.
You know, I wouldn't follow Warren Buffett either.
You know why?
Because he invests the money.
Why would I let him invest my money?
I want the fun.
So what's the investment you make the most in?
Look, please hear what I'm saying.
Yes.
I made a fortune in 2008.
2020, I'm making more money.
I'm paying less taxes.
It doesn't mean I don't have problems, but I'm prepared for this.
My biggest problem right now is because everybody's taking a vacation.
I can't get enough product.
I'm selling out.
My cash flow game is sold out.
It's selling out constantly all over the world.
All over the world, I get royalties for my book sales.
My book sales are going through the roof right now.
I was going to become a captain in the Marine Corps, but I had some disciplinary problems.
And those were the best things that ever happened to me.
So I have disciplinary problems, but I'm very disciplined.
And the people who are sick or poor right now, they lack discipline.
There's two kinds of discipline.
There's internal or self-discipline.
And then there's external discipline.
So right now, if the world's kicking your butt, that's external discipline.
And if you're self-disciplined, the world's kissing your butt right now.
It's up to you.
So that's why I love the Marine Corps.
That's why I love going to military school and not a university.
Because I got my ass kicked every
single freaking day.
First word I had to learn
at the academy,
mission. Mission is
spiritual. What's your mission?
And my mission has always been
to serve people.
Most people, all they give up is making
money and growing people. That's called the Federal give up is making money and growing people.
That's called
the Federal Reserve Bank,
Wall Street,
and all that.
I want nothing to do with them.
I just don't play their game.
But you have to get smarter
not to play their game.
So that's why YouTube
has the best teachers.
This guy, George Gammon,
he's a great teacher.
Patrick McDavid,
fantastic teacher.
Cardone,
fantastic teachers. Soone, fantastic teachers.
So choose your teachers wisely.
That's what I say because I have to choose between my rich dad and my poor dad.
My poor dad, PhD, poor, helpless, and desperate.
And that's what he wanted me to do when I came back from Vietnam
was get my master's degree, get my PhD, and fly for the airlines.
If I had done that, my friends who flew for United, they're broke.
You know why they're broke?
Because Wall Street stole their pensions.
You know, it's called an ESOP, Employee Stock Option Plan.
The biggest crisis coming up right now after this pandemic is pensions are going to crash.
That's right.
You got it.
Yeah.
Thanks.
Why are they going to crash?
Because they're empty.
Wall Street looted them. My my god wake up wake up you know there's a better book than that it's called the creature from jackal island by
by uh g edward griffin it's a big book get it on audiobook and listen to it you know a couple of
couple of 10 minutes a night or something the federal Federal Reserve only has only one purpose, is to keep the rich
rich. That's their only job. So every time the market crashes, as you notice, money pumps in,
they pump the market, they pump the prices up. The rich exit, and the poor and middle class,
who listen to Dave Ramsey and Susie Orman, and their advice is good for the middle class,
don't get me wrong they're told to invest
for the long term okay so what's happening to the poor and middle class with their 401k and ir right
now is set that's like saying okay put the handcuffs on on the titanic it's going down
meanwhile the rich have got their g5 flying in to pick them up and get off the boat.
They're out.
Because the problem isn't in the stock market.
The problem, you know, the problems of the repo market,
corporate credit market, the commercial paper market.
They don't tell you that.
They don't teach that in school.
So suddenly, voila, you know, in September, the shadow banking, which is corporate credit and commercial paper market started to go bad in September.
Suddenly, pandemic.
Oh, that was interesting.
Funny how that appeared.
So I'm not saying the pandemic isn't real I'm saying the real crisis
it's a smokescreen for the real crisis
going on right now
they're stealing your wealth through your pensions, your 401k, your IRA
through social security, through your taxes, through Medicare
that's why we have socialism kicking in right now, we have Bernie Sanders 401k, your IRA, through Social Security, through your taxes, through Medicare.
That's why we have socialism kicking in right now.
We have Bernie Sanders and AOC and Elizabeth Warren, hardcore socialists.
But if you can see, if you really have a financial education,
we're going from capitalists, which I am, and nothing wrong with a socialist. there are some people, 20% of the people need to be given money
because they're that unable for whatever reason.
They're not able to.
So we should give some people money, but not everybody.
So we're going from capitalism to Bernie Sanders, socialism,
and Hillary and all those guys.
And then we're actually going to communism.
And you can see it right now because Boeing is asking for a bailout and all these guys are And then we're actually going to communism. And you can see it right now because
Boeing is asking for a bailout and all these guys asking for bailouts. But this time, the Fed's
going to take percentage ownership. Really? Yes, that's communism, central control of the economy.
I'm not saying it's right or wrong, but it's coming. But that's what they should teach us
in school. And our school teachers, most of them are socialists, and some of them are communists.
They want the government to tell us what to do.
They're really fascists.
They're really fascists.
A fascist wants to tell you what to do.
So you look at this stuff, what's it called, social distancing?
You know, you're taking away the First Amendment,
the right to assemble.
PC, political correctness is freedom of speech.
That's what's going on. And then they're printing money under all this scheme. So if you study real world PC-ness, we've lost our
freedom of speech. That's what Stalin took away.
And social distancing is the right to assembly, which is why
there was a revolutionary war back in 1776.
The Americans had to go hide in a church because
the British would kill them if they were caught assembling.
History repeats. I'm not saying it's right or wrong, but most people are taught this. That's why
I love going to military school versus university.
They teach a lot of history, probably. We're taught military history.
History is bullshit. Through the victor goes history.
So the person that wins the war writes history to justify their position today.
Oh.
It's called his story.
You know, the loser doesn't get to tell their story.
Funny.
So anyway, that's where we're at.
And I'll just leave it to your generation you guys are
the best position ever because you're still young you're tech savvy which and the baby boomers aren't
so they're all a lot of them are feeble and they're gone yeah so you guys have the world
ahead of you and use this time to be creative and take action and be bold.
I think I saw something about in 2008 to 2010,
some of the greatest companies or the biggest companies of today
were started then, Airbnb, Uber, all these other companies.
Bitcoin.
Bitcoin.
2009.
Wow.
See, I love Bitcoin.
What's your thoughts on cryptocurrency?
Why do you love Bitcoin?
Listen, Bitcoin is open source.
The Fed can't touch it.
You don't like the Fed?
The creature from Jekyll Island, the Fed.
The Fed is not a bank.
It's a cartel.
All by the richest guys on earth.
Okay, you guys just wake up, you know. So anyway, the Fed is a cartel. So when I saw Bitcoin come out,
it's open source, it's people's money. Gold and silver are God's money. So my whole objective is,
I go through my system of business, but I'm buying gold and silver.
I store it in other countries legally because you can't just move that stuff.
You have to move it legally and declare it.
I move my money illegally.
I'm going to get out of this country.
So I keep my wealth outside this country, not because of my government.
It's because there's so many people you're going to see lawsuits are going to go up because people are desperate they don't have any money so when the economy gets bad that's why you know have you
been in an accident have you been hurt let me i'll come out sue them for you so if you don't have
the right corporate corporate entity like llc corporations as corporations offshore accounts
you got money's going to be stolen.
It's the real game.
It's not this Dave Ramsey stuff, man.
It's not the Susie Orman stuff.
Not that they're bad.
I mean, they're friends of mine.
I just wouldn't follow their advice.
Choose your teachers.
Your pensions, watch, in a few years,
he did tell us our pensions are gone.
You know what's going to happen?
They're going to bail them out again.
Because if you read this book here, The Creature, it says bailout is the name of the game.
Back in the 80s, there was a guy named Neil Bush. Let's see, the Bush family, George, George,
Silverado Savings. When Neil Bush got in trouble, George and George bailed him out.
Yeah.
I mean, you say there's two different types of pensions.
What's the difference between a normal pension that someone would get
and a defined benefit plan pension?
Why should people be aware of these things?
Well, defined benefit is industrial age.
That was my poor debts.
So what happens,
I got a job with Ford Motor Company
and I get defined benefit,
which defined benefit
means you got a paycheck for life.
If they promise you $1,000 a month,
you get that for the rest of your life guaranteed.
Well, the problem was, as you know,
right around the 70s,
that's when China and Japan
and Germany came on.
So they had to get rid of pensions because pensions are a drag on the
business. So they came up with a thing called ERISA, which
today is known as a 401k. So a 401k type
is a defined contribution. So you have defined benefit, which is
industrial age. Defined corporation is the 401k contribution.
So defined contribution means you only get what you put in.
If it's not enough there, aloha.
It's not our problem today.
So I meet all these millennials who go, oh, I have a 401k.
And I said, do you like bending over and picking up the soap?
You know what I mean?
They don't know the difference.
Yeah.
Because you know what a 401k means?
Fees, fees, fees, fees.
Mutual funds, fees, fees, fees, fees.
Your money is stolen right out of your pension.
Defined benefit, defined contribution. So defined contribution 401k
is information age pension. It came about in 1974 just as the baby boomers entered the workforce.
So today the average baby boomers 401k has $65,000 in it. The guy with a defined benefit,
thousand dollars in it. The guy with a defined benefit, their annual, they have something like a million
in it. The trouble is, they're empty.
That's what Who's Told My Pensions about my co-authors
Ted Siddell. He was an SEC attorney and he became
a whistleblower because he saw how much Wall Street was sucking the cash
of pensions. So that's who must told my pension.
So he made, I think,
$39 million last year blowing the whistle on all these
Wall Street firms. Goldman Sachs and those guys.
What can people be doing when they have this 401k or this pension
already that's going to do nothing for them? What should they be doing when they have this 401k or this pension already? That's going to do nothing for them.
What should they be doing?
Well,
what they should be doing is choosing the teachers wisely because I can tell,
you know,
I don't need money.
Like I write a book,
right.
And I get royalties from 50 different book companies throughout the world.
So let's say I write a book.
I make,
they pay me $10,000 in the right to publish my book.
I have zero expenses, but I collect royalties for the rest of my life. I'm still collecting
huge royalties off of Rich Dad Poor Dad. So I created my own assets. I don't need an ETF.
I created a cash flow board game, which unfortunately sold out right now. But every
time somebody buys one, I get a royalty, whether I work or not.
And then I borrow money, I buy real estate, and then I use the accounting laws, appreciation,
depreciation, amortization, and pay no taxes. Trump doesn't pay taxes either. That's why he won't show his financials. Wow. So you don't pay any taxes right now. Is it because of debt? Is
that the main reason? Because taxes are incentives taxes are government wants you to do
certain things for example if i donated when i donate money to let's say pbs public broadcasting
i got a tax break donate money to church i got a tax break that's what taxes are so they tell you
if you do this we'll give you a tax break so if i have 500 employees i got a tax break if i have
real estate because i'm providing housing i get a tax break. If I have real estate because I'm providing housing, I get a tax break.
So I use debt to buy real estate.
And the more real estate I buy, the less tax I pay.
So that's why Dave Ramsey, his advice is good for that person.
But I need debt to buy the real estate so I don't have to pay any taxes.
Real estate is going down right now, but that's why I have
LLCs and C-corporations
because
they can't get me because I'm
protected by a corporate entity.
Besides, if you read this book here,
the creature, you got to get
the creature. They're going to bail me
out. They already bailed me out.
They just said, how many employees do I have?
We calculated it up. They've been giving me eight weeks of pay to pay my employees really
free money so they'll bail you out wow i love this country
you you say uh don't be a oh go ahead but you can't do that as an employee
out of school get a job your mindset is different employee's. That's rich dad and poor dad.
Poor dad, employee.
Rich dad, entrepreneur.
That was the choice I had to make.
What if someone's not, like you said,
someone's not entrepreneurial-minded
or they don't have those skills?
Can someone become an entrepreneur?
Or is it something you're born with?
You shouldn't ask that.
All kinds of entrepreneurs, if you know what I mean.
Yeah, of course. There's drug dealers are that. All kinds of entrepreneurs, if you know what I mean. Yeah, of course.
There's drug dealers who are entrepreneurs.
Hookers are entrepreneurs.
There's a young girl who works in our neighborhood.
She's a babysitter.
She's an entrepreneur.
So everybody can be an entrepreneur, hopefully be a legal one.
Yeah.
The trouble is it's hard to make enough money if you're not a good entrepreneur.
So anyway, it's just up here.
Find the teachers.
Find the right teachers.
You say don't be a saver, be an investor.
Should people be investing even during these times if they're not comfortable doing that?
Or this is the greatest time to invest is what I'm hearing you say because the opportunity.
Why would you save?
Fear?
No, but that worked
before 1971.
They printed
$4.5 trillion
after 2008.
They estimate they're going to print another $6
to $8 trillion, maybe $10 trillion
after 2020.
At the same time, they're going to pay
zero interest rate policy. So you're
saving money while the Fed's printing money and they're going to pay you no rate policy. So you're saving money while the Fed's printing money,
and they're going to pay you no interest on it.
Why would you save it?
So that's all I say.
And so that's why when Susie talks about saving and Dave talks about saving,
I wouldn't do that.
But for the average person, they should do that.
So that's why choose your teachers wisely.
You just have to know money.
That's all.
Yeah.
And what's your prediction with real estate over the next few years? Do you think it's going to keep going
down now? In LA, I feel like it hasn't gone down at all.
The place continues to grow, but eventually it's got to, right?
I wouldn't invest in LA for one reason, taxes.
That's your choice. People say
it's a nice place to live, and it is.
But I don't like paying taxes.
I don't move there.
Plus, you have what's called, they try to pull it, I forget the name of it,
but you can't raise the rent, some people.
So I don't like it.
Great place to live, great lifestyle.
But we're going to have the biggest crash.
We're going into a depression right now. We're going right past recession into a depression. Really? Yeah.
Wow. You can't have every business closing. And the stock market is going up. But like I said,
the real problems in the repo, the shadow banking market, that's what they're trying to save because
it's broke. They're going bankrupt in there. So the dollar is going to be strong because everybody,
80% of the debt is measured in U.S. dollars.
So everybody needs dollars to pay off their debt.
But in the meantime, the guys for a week, their houses are going to come up for sale,
their Lamborghini, their real estate. I wouldn't touch
commercial real estate. I mean office buildings.
No one can go work anymore. People are working
home for a while or, yeah, whatever. They're gone. Now,
I go to South Africa a lot.
In South Africa, the office buildings became low-income housing.
That's the future. You know those homeless people?
Century City, here they come I know I gotta get
I gotta get out of here now
I'm gonna you know I just think
different that's all
jobs think different
I got a few final questions for you
I really appreciate you sharing and giving us
this tough love which I think a lot of people
need right now
we all need different teachers and I appreciate giving us this tough love, which I think a lot of people need right now. That's politically correct.
It's all good.
We all need different teachers, and I appreciate your perspective.
This is a question I ask everyone towards the end of their conversations.
I call it the three truths.
It's a hypothetical question, but I'd like for you to imagine for a moment that many years from now, it's your last day on this earth,
and you've accomplished
everything. You've accomplished all the things you want in your personal life, your dreams,
it's all happened. But for whatever reason, hypothetically, you got to take all of your
work with you, your books, your content, your board games, all the teachings you've ever given
to the world, it goes with you. And you got to leave only three lessons behind for the rest of us to learn from.
What would you say would be your three lessons or what I like to call three truths?
Well, I think the most important lessons, I think I said this,
my rich guy said all the time, my rich dad always said, you know,
knowledge is finite.
Stupidity is infinite.
So stay stupid. That's a great truth. is finite. Stupidity is infinite.
So stay stupid.
That's a great truth. Because that's how you get knowledge.
He used to always say that to me because my dad always hid behind his diploma, PhD. He didn't know
anything. Most school teachers don't know much.
When people ask me about the Fed, what is the Fed?
I said, have you ever watched The Wizard of Oz?
And they go, yeah.
But you know how Dorothy and the Tin Man and the Lion and the Straw Man,
they went down the yellow brick road.
They were hoping to find the Wizard.
And the Wizard was going to give the Lion a heart or, you know,
Dorothy, whatever she wanted and all this stuff.
And when they get to the wizard or the fed, there was a midget behind it.
There was nothing behind it.
That's the fed.
That's the PhD.
They're hiding behind this thing called diploma.
That's obsolete.
And so that's the second lesson.
Be careful who your teachers are.
Make sure your teacher actually practices what they teach.
So my tax guy is Tom Wheelwright.
His book is Tax-Tree Wealth.
If you really want to stop paying taxes, get that book.
It's 20 bucks.
You'll probably save a couple of million dollars over your lifetime.
But if you don't change this left ear and right ear,
that gap between there, you're screwed.
And then you have my other friend, mother advisor, Andy Tanner.
He wrote the book Stock Market Cash Flow. Instead of
investing for the long term, he makes money in markets going up or down.
I'd rather do that than buy, pray, and hold and listen to Suzy Orman and Dave Ramsey.
But it's your choice. Other guys,
Kenny McElroy, he writes all my real estate books. He's my real estate partner.
We've made fortunes together.
You know, there's just fortunes, tax-free.
Why don't you go to school?
Just buy some books, study them, get their YouTube.
Make some mistakes on your own, right?
Oh, you don't have to just get stupid.
But, you know, blessed are the meek, for they shall inherit.
Meek means egoless.
I'm going to learn.
So I watch YouTube.
So I know what goes on in the stock market.
That's why I stay out of it.
But if you don't know, it might be the best place for you.
So if you want us to end the stock market, that's Andy Tanner,
Stock Market Cash Flow and 401 Chaos.
They tell you what's really going on because they're real.
They're in the market every day.
You know, Jim Rogers wrote the Investment Biker and all that.
He lives in Singapore.
He basically says the problem with the Fed is they don't know what they're talking about.
They're idiots.
And we listen to them.
They're the Wizard of Oz.
Everybody thinks they know something because they got this piece of paper.
Like my poor dad called a PhD.
Rich dad, poor dad had a financial statement.
You cannot lie in your financial statement because that's fraud.
PhDs, diploma.
Rich people, financial statements.
The other thing is this.
I don't have a financial planner.
I have a family office.
The rich have family offices. So don't have a financial planner. I have a family office. The rich have family offices.
So we have money to lend constantly.
We make so much money.
So there's a difference in the mindset,
the intelligence of what you learn.
So I think the most important thing
that you're teaching people
in the school of greatness
is basically choose your teachers.
What path you want to go down you know when your
football career ended it was the best thing that happened to you yeah start finding mentors yeah
and that's what you're doing and so you're a great role model for your generation oh thank you in my
generation they're still baby boomers what's that hello boomer what do they say hey boomers
be boomers what's that hello boomer what do they say hey boomers we're idiots jeez they still think most boomers are still counting on social security on the stock market
i hear you uh did i don't know if you said the third one you said knowledge is uh finite
stupidity is infinite so stay stupid number one which i love that because i've always felt like
i'm the dumbest person in the texas what's that be humble and make mistakes i learned yeah
exactly exactly uh be careful who your teachers are and the third one was um don't hide behind
a diploma you know if somebody says to you show me your financials? So that's the story of a family office versus,
everybody has a home office.
That's different than a family office.
So a family office is like a hedge fund.
But rich guys have their own hedge funds
or their own private equity firms.
That's what it is.
So that's where you want to get to.
So when you're there, the difference is,
people ask me for money like on Shark Tank.
The first thing I ask them for is not the diploma.
Show me your financials.
If they don't have financials, I won't invest with them because they don't know what they're talking about.
Just because you have a cool degree or fancy paper doesn't mean you can get results.
Oh, God.
You see, you can lie from behind a diploma.
That's what the Fed's doing.
Yeah.
Trump has financials.
So that's all Rich Dad Poor Dad's about.
It's about financial statements.
And the cash flow game is you physically, again, like I said,
it's physically you have this four
intelligence mental emotional physical spiritual the game makes you fill out your financials on
these four intelligences yeah because you have to move the things you have to fill out the numbers
and all this stuff so it's max it's max learning unfortunately the game is sold out but anyway
that's how i designed 26 years ago i don't
know how i got yeah they can go they can go order and it'll be out hopefully in the next couple
months they can get it on a wait list i don't everybody's on vacation you have uh you've you've
impacted millions of people's lives around the world i remember actually playing the game with my mom 20, 22 years ago.
I don't know.
I was a kid, a teenager, and I remember learning these principles.
And even though I didn't fully understand it,
and even though it seemed like too much for me to understand as a teenager
and overwhelming, it planted a seed.
And so did the book, Rich Dad, Poor Dad, which I learned about at an early age.
So I want to acknowledge you for being a teacher in a world of teachers.
Educate people on a specific way, not the only way, but a way that has worked for you
and worked for millions of people around the world for constantly creating value, board
games, being creative with your content to educate us in this way.
And I'm really just grateful that you continue to show up and serve and be yourself because
you are a unique human being.
And I appreciate you, Robert, for your own style and approach.
Thank you.
But you know why you and I are great teachers?
Why is that?
We didn't do well in school.
Yeah, because we have to be curious and learn.
Well, we just like that style of education.
It worked for my poor dad.
It didn't work for my rich dad.
Yeah.
And you see, that's what I mean.
Choose your teachers wisely.
Yeah.
And there's millions of ways you can become rich,
but you've got to find your way, your teacher, your path.
And you've got this book out now, Who Stole My Pension.
Make sure to check this out to really educate yourself on what's happening with pensions,
401ks, and what you can do with your money moving forward.
This is great.
It's going to help a lot of people who are going to be trapped if they're not educated
on this.
The biggest reason is if you're young, it's your age.
Most of you guys will have your parents and siblings moving in with you.
And we'll have to pay for them.
My mom is 68, 69.
I'm already having to figure out, okay, how do I support her?
And if she loses her 401k, you're toast.
Yeah.
She's making a few thousand, I think, from her retirement and pension
or a couple of different things she has from the company she works for.
In that book, there are pilots like me.
My pilot friends were making $400,000 a year.
They got nothing now.
Wow.
And then the other guy is a UPS driver, a Teamster.
He was making $5,000 a month, now making $900 a month for UPS.
Yeah.
Those are major firms.
So you read Who Stole My Pension, them with. UPS. Yeah. Those are major firms.
So you read Who Stole My Pension and it gives you a glimpse more into what's coming.
It's the next crisis coming up.
It's a baby boomer crisis.
Just like the pandemic is a
baby boomer crisis. They're picking on
the old guys again.
Make sure you guys
get this book. Also 25th anniversary of Rich Dad Poor Dad coming up next year. Go get this book. Also 25th anniversary of rich dad,
poor dad coming up next year.
Go get that book.
If you have already read it in the past,
read it again because we constantly need to be reminded and educated.
And we see,
what's that?
Repetition is how we learn.
That's it.
We constantly got to learn.
Even if we've learned it in the past,
you might've forgotten. You got to relearn even if we've learned it in the past you might
have forgotten you got to relearn and reapply what you learn yeah so get that book uh we try
to stock ourselves and give them away to people how many times i've gone through this book
so you're saying you didn't master it after the first time no i'm a slow learner yeah
you know and that's a poor reader and a poor writer.
But that's why we're good teachers.
I love it.
I've got one final question for you, and people can follow you online.
They can get the book.
We'll link everything up here.
You've got some great stuff on social media, on Instagram.
So I'd say go follow Robert on Instagram as well.
My final question for you, Robert, is what is your definition of greatness?
Getting up every day.
At my age, you've got to worry about that stuff.
You know what I mean?
My plan was to die at 72.
I almost died so many times.
I went down three times in Vietnam.
And my days were numbered from the start.
I've had open heart surgery.
I've had cancer.
I've had pneumonia.
I've had malaria.
And so, you know, when everybody talks about this COVID-19, I said, been there, done that one, you know.
But each one of it inspired me to get healthier.
And so this crisis should inspire people to get wealthier or you can be a loser.
So I don't know why I'm going with that, but it's just everything bad is good,
and everything good will be bad.
Or that's what Nazim Taleb says, you're either fragile, robust, or anti-fragile.
And the people following you are anti-fragile, or they wouldn't be following you.
Yeah, that's it.
Robert, thank you so much for your wisdom, for sharing today.
I can't wait to learn more.
As one of my teachers,
I want to continue to learn from you.
So thanks for everything, man.
Thanks to all you guys who are following you as a teacher.
I appreciate it.
Thank you.
I hope you enjoyed this special interview
with Robert Kiyosaki.
He's definitely got his own opinions.
He's got his own perspective
and the way he's
done things to generate wealth during up economies, down economies. We have some other great resources
on this as well. Feel free to subscribe to the School of Greatness podcast if this is your first
time here. We have other great inspirational leaders, Tony Robbins, Dave Ramsey, and others
who have built wealth in other ways. Make sure to check those episodes out as well.
Just scroll down on the School of Greatness app over on Apple or Spotify to see the other
insights on how to make money, how to build your side hustle, and how to build wealth
during this time.
If you enjoyed this, please share with a friend.
Text a friend, lewishouse.com slash 943, or just copy and paste the link on the
podcast app that you're listening to right now and send it to a few friends, a WhatsApp group chat
over on Instagram stories, and make sure to tag me and Robert Kiyosaki so we can stay up to date
that you're listening and paying attention. I'm so grateful that you took the time today to
really educate yourself, to learn,
to develop something new, and to try it on. And the best thing you can do right now is start taking
action. Keep learning. Keep educating. Go share this with someone else. Teach someone else this
so that you can learn it even more. And take action and apply something you learned today
into your life, into your finances. Use this to your advantage. I want you to use me and this information as much as possible.
Abuse it.
Take advantage of it.
Go out there and take action and improve your life.
That's our mission at the School of Greatness, and I can't wait to see what type of results
you create.
I love this quote by Steve Jobs.
If today was the last day of your life, would you want to do what you're about to do today?
Ask yourself that question. Ask yourself what are the things that you don't like about your life,
things that you want to improve about your life, and go out there and start making small
daily improvements. I want to remind you that you matter. You're an incredible human being
born to do great things in the world. You were born for greatness. It's inside of you.
You may not feel great. You may not feel good. You may not even feel average right now, but that's
okay. You can change it by doing little actions every day to build your belief and build yourself
into the great things you want to do and be. I believe in you. I love you. And you know what
time it is. It's time to go out there and do something great.