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The War on Winners
The War on Winners
Dear Reader,
They’re coming for the rich. Again.
The real power in America isn’t held by politicians. It’s held by a left-wing mob of academics, journalists, and bureaucrats. They have a monopoly on ideas.
The only group with the money and the guts to fight back is the rich. For every George Soros, there’s a Peter Thiel. The rich are a diverse, dynamic group of entrepreneurs
An attack on the rich is an attack on your freedom. Without the wealthy to fund opposing ideas and challenge the status quo, the intellectual elites would have total control.
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Bernie Sanders says billionaires should not exist. The media tells you they’re greedy. The professors tell you they’re evil.
It’s a full-blown war on success. A war on wealth. A war on the very people who build the country.
My poor dad would have nodded along.
He was a smart man, a Ph.D. He believed what he read in the papers and what his colleagues in the faculty lounge told him.
He thought the rich were the problem.
My rich dad would have laughed. He knew the truth.
The war on the rich isn’t about fairness. It’s about power.
It’s a turf war. A war between the people who create wealth and the people who only talk about it.
The Real Elite
There’s a new book out by a law professor, John McGinnis. It’s called “Why Democracy Needs the Rich.”
It’s a book that my poor dad would have hated. And it’s a book that proves everything my rich dad taught me.
McGinnis points out the obvious.
The real elite in this country isn’t the rich. It’s a club of academics, journalists, and government bureaucrats.
The “clerisy,” he calls them. The professional talkers.
And this club has a uniform. They all think the same. They all vote the same.
McGinnis lays out the numbers. 95% of federal bureaucrats’ donations went to Hillary Clinton.
The ratio of liberals to conservatives at top universities is 20 to 1. In Hollywood, it’s 115 to 1.
This isn’t a debate. It’s a monopoly. A thought cartel.
They control the schools, the news, the culture.
They are the high priests of the status quo. And they have one enemy: anyone who challenges their power.
The Uncontrollable Rich
And that’s where the rich come in.
The rich are the only group the thought cartel can’t control. Why? Because they don’t need their approval. They have their own money. Their own power. Their own platform.
Unlike the professors and the journalists, the rich are not a monolith.
They don’t all think alike. For every George Soros, there’s a Peter Thiel. For every Bill Gates, there’s a Miriam Adelson.
They come from different backgrounds. They have different ideas. They are a messy, dynamic, and unpredictable bunch.
And that drives the thought cartel crazy. They can’t cancel a billionaire.
They can’t fire him from the university. They can’t kick him out of the club. The rich are the sand in the gears of their well-oiled machine.
They are the counterweight. The opposition. The last line of defense against a total monopoly of ideas.
Skin in the Game
There’s another reason the rich are so important. They have skin in the game.
An academic can promote socialism for 50 years. If it fails, what does he care? He still gets his pension.
A journalist can cheer for policies that destroy the economy. She still gets her paycheck.
But an entrepreneur? A business owner? An investor? Their wealth is tied to the success of the country.
They can’t afford to be wrong. They have to be pragmatic. They have to deal with reality. They can’t live in a world of abstract theories.
When the economy tanks, they lose money. Real money.
Not just bragging rights at a cocktail party. That’s why they are a force for sanity. They are a reality check on the fantasies of the ivory tower.
And the idea that the rich are a permanent aristocracy? It’s a lie.
McGinnis points out that 60% of the people on the Forbes 400 list weren’t there 12 years ago.
The rich are a constantly churning class of winners. They get there by taking risks, by innovating, by building things.
Your Last Line of Defense
So when you hear a politician rail against the rich, understand what you are really hearing.
You are hearing the cry of a king who wants to silence his rivals. You are hearing the voice of a monopolist who wants to crush the competition.
An attack on the rich is an attack on the diversity of ideas. It’s an attack on pragmatism.
It’s an attack on the very people who have the resources to fight back against a corrupt and failing system.
You don’t have to like the rich. You don’t have to agree with them. But you need them.
You need them to fund the think tanks that challenge the government’s lies.
You need them to buy the newspapers that tell the other side of the story. You need them to be a pain in the neck to the people in power.
Because without them, there is no one left to fight. Without them, the thought cartel wins.
And you lose. Your freedom. Your future. Your chance to get rich yourself.
Kiyosaki Uncensored
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