Need Help? Contact the Espiya Helpdesk. CLICK HERE


Author Topic: Financial Education Rich Dad Scam#1: Higher Education  (Read 1943 times)

A7x

  • 2006 Vanguards
  • Active - Top Level
  • *
  • Posts: 898
  • Karma 149
  • Gender: Male
  • Shhh.. Be quiet you might piss somebody off..
Financial Education Rich Dad Scam#1: Higher Education
« on: September 26, 2014, 01:17:47 pm »

By:RK

There are all sorts of scam artists in the world. Most of the time we can spot them, like those emails that promise us millions if we’ll just give away our bank account numbers. Sometimes we don’t spot them until it’s too late or they make a mistake, like with Bernie Madoff. And sometimes we don’t know we’re being scammed at all because we’re conditioned to think from the cradle that something is the best and right advice for living.

Over the next few posts, I’m going to explore the scams that most people never know about in a series I call Rich Dad Scams. The first one we’ll explore is higher education.

The “school = success” scam

When I was young, my poor dad always told me the best path to success was to go to school. He felt that was the best way to get a good job. The problem was that my poor dad was one of the most educated people I knew, but he was always complaining about money and how unhappy he was with his work.

My rich dad, on the other hand, didn’t have a college degree. Yet he was very rich and successful. Rich dad said, “School teaches you to be an employee. If you want to be rich, don’t count on school.”

So, from a very young age, I learned that the promise of higher education for success was one of the biggest scams around. That’s why the first Rich Dad Scam identified is higher education.

Going to school doesn’t make you financially smart

Because I’m outspoken against the school system, I’m often accused of being anti-education. Nothing could be further from the truth. But “go to college” is one of those things people point at as a way of being successful without ever stopping to think if it’s true.

The Rich Dad Scam that school will make you a success is perpetrated everywhere and all the time. What will make you successful is not going to school but rather financial education—learning how money works and how to make it work for you—is what will make you successful, and, unfortunately, you can’t get that in school.

When it comes to money, going to school won’t make you smart.

Understanding value

This doesn’t mean that education isn’t important. The basic education you get in your K-12 years is important to everything that comes after. And if you want to be a teacher, a lawyer, or a doctor, then obviously you’re going to need to go to college.

But what you won’t learn in school is how money works. Education, particularly in America, doesn’t teach students how to live or be self-sufficient. Instead, it teaches us to be employees instead of our own bosses. It makes us workers instead of innovators. That’s a big reason why we call school a Rich Dad Scam. In fact, the rich use school to keep poor people poor.

Different types of intelligence

One of the worst things about school is that it recognizes only one type of intelligence—book smarts. If you aren’t book smart, you are very quickly labeled smart or stupid. As a child, I was not book smart, and I was labeled stupid. But I wasn’t stupid. I was just interested in different things. And I was bored. For instance, no one could tell me when I’d ever use calculus in my real life! Yet, I was told to comply and learn. I was being trained to be an employee.

My rich dad wasn’t book smart either. Yet, he was very smart. He had street smarts, which he used to become very rich. School doesn’t teach you to be street smart. I had to learn that from my rich dad. My poor dad thought school was incredibly important, and he was very book smart. But what did it get him? He struggled financially most of his life.

That’s another reason why we label higher education a Rich Dad Scam. The so-called experts tell you that you need it. They tell you it’s important. But it doesn’t actually do anything for you except make you a good employee.

“But I studied money in college!”

Tom Wheelwright, my Rich Dad Advisor on taxes, went to school to be an accountant and got straight A’s. He will also gladly tell you that he got no practical financial education. He learned what was needed to do a job but not how to successfully manage his own finances. And he went to school to learn about money!

People often say they learned about money in school. You may learn how to balance a checkbook in school, but you won’t learn how money really works. That’s not an accident; it’s a scam.

The rich use school to train us to be good employees. We start out being told what to do, and are rewarded for compliance. It’s very easy to transition from a school to a company where you’re told what to do. And that leads us to trust and hand things off to the government and the rich bankers who handle our 401(k). The rich use education to make themselves richer and keep you poor, and when you realize that, it’s not hard to see why it’s one of our Rich Dad Scams.

Think for yourself

The people who fall for scams are typically those who are conditioned not to think for themselves. Unfortunately, Rich Dad Scam #1, Higher Education, robs us of the independence to think for ourselves, to think like an entrepreneur, an innovator, and an investor. It instead teaches us to be dependent.

You need to learn to speak the language of money to be successful. That takes financial education, which opens up a whole new world, a world where you can succeed on your own terms. Unfortunately, our schools don’t teach that language. They teach you the basics, and then they either teach you a specific trade or skill, or they simply train you to be an employee.

Today, it’s time to start thinking for yourself. Don’t fall for this the scam of higher education. Instead, start your financial education today, and begin your journey to financial freedom.

rylie_69

  • Mature (18+)
  • Active - Two Stars
  • *
  • Posts: 266
  • Karma 2
    • Patricia
Re: Financial Education Rich Dad Scam#1: Higher Education
« Reply #1 on: September 30, 2014, 08:19:13 pm »
thanx for sharing.
please allow me to share a link to the downloadable full version of the ebook, Rich Dad Scams.
http://laurentiumihai.ro/wp-content/uploads/downloads/2014/01/Rich-Dad-Scams.pdf
sablay:

tigerwing

  • Pioneer
  • Active - Top Level
  • *
  • Posts: 950
  • Karma 54
Re: Financial Education Rich Dad Scam#1: Higher Education
« Reply #2 on: October 01, 2014, 03:22:11 am »
So we should all stop sending our children to school then???  ::lmao ::lmao ::lmao

Im sorry to say this, but the idea that "going to college" is just as scam, quite frankly, is stupid..

Yes, education does not guarantee wealth and success. Yes, a college degree is not an absolute necessity in order to have wealth and be successful. AND YES, some of the richest most successful people in the wold today do not have a college degree. At the end of the day, its up to "YOU" to get wealthy. Education like money is just a tool..

But lets be realistic here. How many corporate executives, CEO's, Presidents,etc. are out there that do not have proper education? I'm sure there are a lot but its undeniable that majority of the worlds "rich", those people that are positioned at the very top, most of them are well educated..

Think of a scenario between 2 people.. One is a mere High school graduate, the other has a bachelors degree and an MBA. Realistically speaking, who do you think is more likely to become rich and successful? What kind of job do you think a mere HS grad can get? how much will he get paid? then compare that with someone with an MBA?

Investments? the MBA guy has a way larger salary. Therefore he can invest more. The larger your investments the larger your gains.

Going to business? this is probably the only way an HS grad can become rich. But how? He will have to start from scratch. His first job pays peanuts so where will he get the capital needed? Mangungutang sa iba? And what does a HS grad know about starting a business? He will have to learn it all overtime and is therefore more likely to fail, It will be a hit or miss for him.

How about our MBA guy? his first job pays rather well, he can probably have the capital he needs to start his own business without borrowing from others. And if ever he decides to borrow money, his experience in the world of finance as well as his "connections" will make it easier to get what he needs.. Who would you rather entrust your money with? the highschooler or the one with the MBA? And when it comes to putting up and managing a business, well this is what our MBA guy is trained for. Not to mention the fact that he doesn't really need to have his own business to be wealthy. He can simply continue on climbing the corporate ladder. every promotion means a bigger pay check. Every pay check is more money for him to invest and acquire income generating assets...


Finally, “School teaches you to be an employee." I don't know where you guys came from but my Alma Matter never thought us to become mere employees. On the contrary, we were thought to push the boundaries and reach for the stars. But really, if one decides to become an employee whats so wrong with that? Its as if being employed automatically means being poor. Mind you, Mr. Ramon S. Ang IS an employee of San Miguel (president and COO), how much do you think is his monthly salary? Is he poor? His Net worth by the way is about $260M.
 

maniac2999

  • Console Gamers
  • Active - Top Level
  • *
  • Posts: 1287
  • Karma 178
Re: Financial Education Rich Dad Scam#1: Higher Education
« Reply #3 on: October 01, 2014, 03:25:47 am »
IMHO, RK is actually one of the best manipulative persons in the world.. all these talks and teachings ultimately lead to having people give up what they believe in and pursue something that will make RK rich: Networking.

He's making money and virtually destroying futures in the process, I don't like the guy.

A7x

  • 2006 Vanguards
  • Active - Top Level
  • *
  • Posts: 898
  • Karma 149
  • Gender: Male
  • Shhh.. Be quiet you might piss somebody off..
Re: Financial Education Rich Dad Scam#1: Higher Education
« Reply #4 on: October 01, 2014, 01:29:40 pm »
A lot of people seek higher degrees because they are attracted to the idea of making more money after they graduate. Some people also like the status of being a doctor, lawyer, engineer even if that means years of education, school loans, and 60+ work hours/week.

My sister is a nurse and she rarely met somebody who was doing it because they liked it. Instead, because of the status in society and potential of earning more money. The truth is, and this is my opinion, people are usually attracted to money when choosing a career. And what I think Robert is trying to say is that, if you fit in that category, you're better off investing the money you would put towards your education in order to not only (potentially) generate more capital but also, gain freedom as a result, instead of making someone else rich with your hard work if your main focus is to be wealthy and free.

He's not saying education is bad. He actually encourages it. He being consistent in all his books that he encourages education. The issue is that the education system does train people to be nothing other than how to be employees and not innovators. Degree is not enough to be in the other side of the cash flow quadrant. Otherwise, why have so many people who have degrees working on call centers (no offense to call center agents since I worked also in a call center for 6 years.) and other areas that have nothing to do with what they studied for rather than using it to create wealth for themselves?
« Last Edit: October 01, 2014, 01:33:21 pm by A7x »

tigerwing

  • Pioneer
  • Active - Top Level
  • *
  • Posts: 950
  • Karma 54
Re: Financial Education Rich Dad Scam#1: Higher Education
« Reply #5 on: October 01, 2014, 08:28:43 pm »
A lot of people seek higher degrees because they are attracted to the idea of making more money after they graduate. Some people also like the status of being a doctor, lawyer, engineer even if that means years of education, school loans, and 60+ work hours/week.

My sister is a nurse and she rarely met somebody who was doing it because they liked it. Instead, because of the status in society and potential of earning more money. The truth is, and this is my opinion, people are usually attracted to money when choosing a career. And what I think Robert is trying to say is that, if you fit in that category, you're better off investing the money you would put towards your education in order to not only (potentially) generate more capital but also, gain freedom as a result, instead of making someone else rich with your hard work if your main focus is to be wealthy and free.

He's not saying education is bad. He actually encourages it. He being consistent in all his books that he encourages education. The issue is that the education system does train people to be nothing other than how to be employees and not innovators. Degree is not enough to be in the other side of the cash flow quadrant. Otherwise, why have so many people who have degrees working on call centers (no offense to call center agents since I worked also in a call center for 6 years.) and other areas that have nothing to do with what they studied for rather than using it to create wealth for themselves?

its a widely known fact that nurses in the Philippines are paid peanuts, its also a widely known fact that there is an oversupply of them hence more competition in job placements. And if you actually dont like what nurses do, then I cant understand why on earth would you choose to become one. It just doesn't make sense really.. In reality, there's nothing wrong with the education system.. Its just people being stu*** 

They key is to know where you're going, To know your self and what you really want in life.. If your goal is to be rich and wealthy, and your personality gravitates toward business, then why would you pick nursing as a career? Why not take a business related degree in the first place. The reality is that "right" education will give you an edge. It will actually open doors of opportunity for you.

Also, keep in mind that business, again, is not for everyone. If your not the kind of person fitted to become an entrepreneur, then you're just wasting your time, effort and money as well. Chances are you will fail..

And doctors, lawyer, and engineers? I don't know about engineers but doctors and lawyers are actually classified as HIGH INCOME earners in this country.. If your a lawyer or a doctor and you're poor, then you must be doing something very wrong with your life.

juan pablo

  • 2006 Vanguards
  • Active - Three Stars
  • *
  • Posts: 334
  • Karma 25
Re: Financial Education Rich Dad Scam#1: Higher Education
« Reply #6 on: October 01, 2014, 09:45:26 pm »
He's not saying education is bad. He actually encourages it. He being consistent in all his books that he encourages education. The issue is that the education system does train people to be nothing other than how to be employees and not innovators. Degree is not enough to be in the other side of the cash flow quadrant. Otherwise, why have so many people who have degrees working on call centers (no offense to call center agents since I worked also in a call center for 6 years.) and other areas that have nothing to do with what they studied for rather than using it to create wealth for themselves?

How can you really state this "The issue is that the education system does train people to be nothing other than how to be employees and not innovators." as a fact? So they train business entrepreneur students to be nothing more than employees? How about those students in the field of science, they don't encourage them to be forward thinkers or innovators?

We have a lot of call center agents with a degree that has nothing to do with it because frankly there is no job opportunity for their chosen field available here. If they simply refuse to get a job because it is not in their field then they would not have any money to invest in anything.

If we are going to put the education system on the spot then I think it would be fair to criticize how businesses prefer to hire employees with a college degree, wouldn't you agree?

gardov

  • Gold Member (Premium)
  • Active - Top Level
  • *
  • Posts: 1359
  • Karma 43
Re: Financial Education Rich Dad Scam#1: Higher Education
« Reply #7 on: October 03, 2014, 06:29:28 am »
 ang scam ata dito ay yung pagbili ng libro nung taong may "rich dad at poor dad".

lagi kong naririnig yang term na " street smarts" kaso karaniwan nanggagaling sa mga manggagantso at sa mga nakatambay sa kanto lol.





ipcmlr

  • Active - Two Stars
  • **
  • Posts: 232
  • Karma 124
Re: Financial Education Rich Dad Scam#1: Higher Education
« Reply #8 on: October 03, 2014, 04:38:49 pm »
End of kwento:


KaMushroom

  • 2007 Bravehearts
  • Active - Top Level
  • *
  • Posts: 1648
  • Karma 24
  • Gender: Male
Re: Financial Education Rich Dad Scam#1: Higher Education
« Reply #9 on: October 03, 2014, 08:45:59 pm »
If youd think clearly, theres no one way to become rich.
.