What Schools Will Never Teach You About Money By Robert T. Kiyosaki
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Get Off the Plantation
My poor dad became a teacher because he was a product of the plantation system of Hawaii. His father, my grandfather, came over on a boat from Japan to work in the sugar and pineapple fields of Hawaii. As an employer, I occasionally interview potential employees looking for a job. Sadly, most are focused on only wages and benefits: “How much will you pay me?” “What are my benefits?” “What are the hours?” “How much time off can I have?” “How fast can I get promoted?” No one has ever asked: “What is the mission of this company?” “What problem is the company solving?” “What can I learn from working here?” Rather than ask socially responsible questions, they ask questions about money and working conditions. They ask questions from a proletariat’s frame of mind. This working-class programming begins when parents say to their child: “Go to school to get a high-paying job,” or “Go to school and become a lawyer, doctor, or web designer. If you have a profession, you will always have something to fall back on.” Remember rich dad’s #1 rule: The rich don’t work for money. Home is where proletariat programming begins. Working-class parents want their kids to become higher-educated working-class people, people who ultimately work for the ultra rich. When a child enters school, the teachers (who are also from the proletariat class of capitalism, a class that does not own production) continue the programming by saying, “If you do as I tell you and get good grades, you will beat your classmates to that high-paying job.” Once the child enters college, beating out many of their lesser classmates, the teachers continue with their working-class dogma, saying, “If you have a master’s degree or a PhD, your resume will look better. The higher your degree, the better your chances of getting that high-paying job.” Pavlov caused his dogs to salivate by ringing a bell. Our education system rings the school bell, chiming the promise of a high-paying job. All someone has to say is “high-paying job,” and people start lining up. If a person “wins” by getting that job and beating out the lesser job candidates, they are only too happy to agree to have their taxes deducted from their paycheck—so the government gets paid before they do. Conclusion Unfair Advantage 195 194 they were put up in plantation housing and were given a charge account at the company store. “When payday came, the immigrants found the rent for the house and the charges from the company store deducted from their paycheck. At the end of the month, most workers had nothing left. A few owed more money because they charged too much at the company store. Many immigrants never received any money. They worked for free.” He would end his talk by saying, “This is why you have to study hard—so you can get a job off the plantation.” In my father’s immediate family, education was cherished. Most of my relatives have advanced degrees. Many relatives have master’s degrees and a few have their doctorate degrees. I am one of the few with only a Bachelor of Science degree. The problem is that many of my relatives work for the biggest plantation of all, the government. A few of their highly educated children work for modern plantations with names such as Coca-Cola, United Airlines, Bank of America, and IBM. Most of my family, although highly educated, never made it off the plantation. Download 5.81 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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