Robert Kiyosaki ... Patriot or Tyrant?
Posted: 2003-12-06 01:57am
I picked up Robert Kiyosaki's book Rich Dad, Poor Dad from the library recently, since he was from Hawaii and I vaguely remember hearing about him in the local media at one point. I was intrigued by some of his precepts, so I picked up his other books. While interesting, none of them went into particular detail. I assumed his game Cashflow would do all he promised and that his books were simply promotional tools for them
Trouble started when I looked up his website. His Cashflow "E-Game" costs $99. Now, I know that computer games can be pricey, but this is just ridiculous. And his boardgame runs for $190! Is it really that good or is he playing everyone for suckers? And why would someone who purportedly became financially independent at age 47 need my money?
I dug a little deeper, which for me means I went on SD and did a search. I picked up TrailerParkJawa's thread on how Kiyosaki seemed to be doctoring his Amazon reviews. Off to Amazon I go. The guy has 1347 reviews, most of them four or five-star. Since I wasn't particularly looking for praise, I focused on the 2 tar and below. I had to do a bit of searching, but the ones I found seemed far more intelligent than the rave reviews, most of which consisted of anonymous reviewers talking about how they made millions of dollars and own their own villa in the south pacific after reading his books. I exaggerate, but the average intelligence level seemed disproportinately low, even on the internet. One of the reviewers mentioned John T. Reed's review of him, so Google ... away!
What I found was very interesting.
I was hoping Kiyosaki was the real thing. I really was. I was in a slump, possibly medication-assisted, and hoping for something that would motivate me. Well, his book certainly did that - but real, useful advice? Apart from common sense advice "Buy low, sell high" (which I learned from playing Elite), no, not really. At least this solves one problem - I can spend the $99+ I saved on his bizarrely colorful game on copies of Simcity 4.
The end.[/url]
Trouble started when I looked up his website. His Cashflow "E-Game" costs $99. Now, I know that computer games can be pricey, but this is just ridiculous. And his boardgame runs for $190! Is it really that good or is he playing everyone for suckers? And why would someone who purportedly became financially independent at age 47 need my money?
I dug a little deeper, which for me means I went on SD and did a search. I picked up TrailerParkJawa's thread on how Kiyosaki seemed to be doctoring his Amazon reviews. Off to Amazon I go. The guy has 1347 reviews, most of them four or five-star. Since I wasn't particularly looking for praise, I focused on the 2 tar and below. I had to do a bit of searching, but the ones I found seemed far more intelligent than the rave reviews, most of which consisted of anonymous reviewers talking about how they made millions of dollars and own their own villa in the south pacific after reading his books. I exaggerate, but the average intelligence level seemed disproportinately low, even on the internet. One of the reviewers mentioned John T. Reed's review of him, so Google ... away!
What I found was very interesting.
I was hoping Kiyosaki was the real thing. I really was. I was in a slump, possibly medication-assisted, and hoping for something that would motivate me. Well, his book certainly did that - but real, useful advice? Apart from common sense advice "Buy low, sell high" (which I learned from playing Elite), no, not really. At least this solves one problem - I can spend the $99+ I saved on his bizarrely colorful game on copies of Simcity 4.
The end.[/url]