RICH DAD POOR DAD BY ROBERT KIYOSAKI | ANIMATED BOOK SUMMARY |
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Watch the 48 Laws of Power summary with in-depth explanations at https://youtu.be/mYOq5Y9qqqs.
Access the full archive for 7$ & download exclusive content at https://gumroad.com/l/illacertus. Stream or download over 8 hours of animated content, new and old plus exclusives as well as upcoming work on Art of Seduction, where available colorized and in original render quality. ...___ Subscribe πͺ http://bit.ly/illacertus Buy "Rich Dad Poor Dad" in the USA - http://amzn.to/1NlLdM3 Buy "Rich Dad Poor Dad" in CA - http://amzn.to/1SS20Xq Buy "Rich Dad Poor Dad" in the UK - http://amzn.to/1TvNP6w When I finished reading this book a month ago, working on this animation ever since, eager to share what is possibly my best video to date(!) I lend Rich Dad, Poor Dad (among others, always one at a time) to my neighbour's kid. He's a 14 years old polyglot, who's so far beyond his years I'm remarkably impressed. I know people in their 40's who are less accomplished & well-read. I've built up quite the library over the past 4 years & I love to share it with people who like to read. I must say, they're hard to find offline. Either way this kid consumes books for adults in his 4th language within a week or two, takes notes, thinks about what he's learned & seeks to discuss the content with me. I don't pressure him, I don't force this on him. He wants to learn & he has taught me a thing or two as well. I'm only happy to assist him in his journey. I have no doubt he will be very successful on the money side of things one day, but more importantly he's happy. But what's the point of me saying this, you might ask. I wish I would've had someone who did the same for me & if I may, please let me suggest that, not if, but when you see someone who needs a helping hand, offer it to them. I'm not trying to sound preachy, but please understand, there's no "millennials", there's only individuals. I'm flabbergasted by how older generations have the audacity to fail miserably at parenting by assuming a "I know how to raise my children!"-stubbornness, do close-to-zero to improve the education system & then mouth their judgement as to how things used to be better & how these kids today are x, y & z, but let me stop here. Lots of children today, not to say, most of them aren't educated, nor raised nearly as well as they could be. There's no greater joy than teaching someone, who's willing to learn (you may have to open them up to the idea, by making it more accessible, perhaps with a cartoonish animated summary of a book on personal finance β) & seeing them progress along the way. Lesson #1: The Rich Donβt Work for Money - The concept of fear & desire. Lesson #2: Learning Financial Literacy Lesson #3: Mind Your Own Business Lesson #4: The History and The Power Of Corporation - The concept of *assets & liabilities* (see Part II) Lesson #5: The Rich Invent Money Lesson #6: Work to Learn ___ Become a Patron | https://www.patreon.com/illacertus Donate through PayPal | https://www.paypal.com/cgi-bin/webscr?cmd=_s-xclick&hosted_button_id=PJ2YFU9H6K65A Music | Ross Bugden |