This is not a technical definition, but a belief system about what money should be.
4. Why ETFs and Paper Assets Are Rejected
The author rejects:
Gold ETFs
Silver ETFs
Bitcoin ETFs
REITs
Because they are:
Paper representations
Controlled by intermediaries
Subject to regulation, freezing, or manipulation
The analogy used:
“I do not live in a paper house or put paper gas in my car.”
Meaning: If something is real and useful, own the real thing—not a financial proxy.
5. Bitcoin as an Inflation Hedge (Not a Safe Bet)
Important nuance:
The author admits Bitcoin can boom and bust
It is still considered superior because:
Supply is fixed
No central authority can create more
It cannot be controlled by governments or elites
So Bitcoin is viewed as volatile but honest, while fiat money is stable-looking but deceptive.
6. “Savers Are Losers”
This idea—popularized in Rich Dad Poor Dad—means:
Saving cash in inflationary systems guarantees loss of purchasing power
Inflation silently transfers wealth from savers to debtors and governments
Financial education is intentionally weak in schools
This explains the criticism of:
Formal education
Elite universities like Harvard University and Yale University
The message: Credentials don’t equal financial freedom—thinking independently does.
7. The Deeper Meaning (In One Sentence)
This passage is saying:
Bitcoin isn’t about getting rich—it’s about opting out of a financial system the author believes is rigged, fragile, and dishonest.
Final Takeaway
You are reading a rebellion against centralized financial authority, not an investment pitch.
It contrasts:
Buffett’s trust in systems
Versus the author’s trust in scarcity, decentralization, and personal control
Whether one agrees or not, the argument is fundamentally about who controls money—and who pays the price when systems fail.
If you want, I can:
Compare this worldview to Buffett’s side fairly
Analyze whether Bitcoin truly protects against inflation
Break down risks in this philosophy
Or explain where both sides may actually agree
Who wrote above text ??
The text was written by Robert Kiyosaki.
He is the author of Rich Dad Poor Dad and the creator of the Cashflow board game. The ideas in the passage—such as “savers are losers,” distrust of the Federal Reserve, preference for gold, silver, and Bitcoin, and rejection of ETFs and Wall Street products—are all consistent with his long-standing public views and statements.
Saddam Hussein (Iraq): Captured by U.S. forces in December 2003 during the Iraq War after being found in a "spider hole" near Tikrit. He was later tried and executed by the Iraqi government in 2006.
Manuel Noriega (Panama): Captured in January 1990 after the U.S. invasion of Panama. He was brought to the U.S., convicted of drug trafficking, and spent decades in prison.
Discipline remains one of the most decisive yet least fully understood drivers of sustainable success in personal life, leadership, and organizational performance. Across industries and cultures, discipline determines whether vision translates into execution or remains a mere aspiration. In a diversified enterprise such as GL HOMES LTD ABA, where real estate development, construction, technology solutions, media operations, and leadership education intersect, discipline is not a soft virtue. It is a strategic necessity. Organizations that grow without discipline expand their problems faster than their capacity to manage them. Individuals who rise without discipline often collapse under the weight of their own success. This paper argues that discipline is not static. It must be intentionally developed, deliberately strengthened, and continuously refined. Developing and growing in discipline is a journey rather than an event. It requires psychological alignment, behavioral consistency, ethical clarity, emotional regulation, and structured accountability. This paper explores discipline as a living system that evolves with responsibility, scale, and influence, rather than as a rigid set of rules.
UNDERSTANDING DISCIPLINE BEYOND POPULAR MISCONCEPTIONS
Many people associate discipline with punishment, harsh control, or denial of pleasure. This misunderstanding has caused many to resist discipline rather than embrace it. Academic literature presents discipline differently. Discipline is best understood as self-regulation aligned with long-term goals (Baumeister & Vohs, 2007). Rather than restricting freedom, discipline expands it by reducing chaos, indecision, and wasted energy. True discipline is not about forcing behavior but about training desire. What a person consistently wants eventually shapes what they consistently do. In professional environments, discipline shows up as reliability, predictability.
A Chinese billionaire speaks broken English - nobody laughs. An Indian scientist speaks broken English, nobody mocks him. A Russian athlete speaks broken English - applause. But let an African mispronounce one word… suddenly he's "illiterate." Who bewitched Africa?” ~ Professor Lumumba
Strong Star Channel
Hallo 🤗🤗🤗
Three Types of Money.
🟡 *_God’s Money_*
Physical gold and silver
Scarce
Cannot be printed
Thousands of years of history
🟠 *_People’s Money_*
Bitcoin and Ethereum
Decentralized
Limited supply (Bitcoin capped at 21 million)
Outside government control
🔴 *_Fake Money_*
Fiat currency
Stocks, bonds, ETFs, REITs
Paper claims on value, not value itself
Dependent on trust in institutions
This is not a technical definition, but a belief system about what money should be.
4. Why ETFs and Paper Assets Are Rejected
The author rejects:
Gold ETFs
Silver ETFs
Bitcoin ETFs
REITs
Because they are:
Paper representations
Controlled by intermediaries
Subject to regulation, freezing, or manipulation
The analogy used:
“I do not live in a paper house or put paper gas in my car.”
Meaning: If something is real and useful, own the real thing—not a financial proxy.
5. Bitcoin as an Inflation Hedge (Not a Safe Bet)
Important nuance:
The author admits Bitcoin can boom and bust
It is still considered superior because:
Supply is fixed
No central authority can create more
It cannot be controlled by governments or elites
So Bitcoin is viewed as volatile but honest, while fiat money is stable-looking but deceptive.
6. “Savers Are Losers”
This idea—popularized in Rich Dad Poor Dad—means:
Saving cash in inflationary systems guarantees loss of purchasing power
Inflation silently transfers wealth from savers to debtors and governments
Financial education is intentionally weak in schools
This explains the criticism of:
Formal education
Elite universities like Harvard University and Yale University
The message: Credentials don’t equal financial freedom—thinking independently does.
7. The Deeper Meaning (In One Sentence)
This passage is saying:
Bitcoin isn’t about getting rich—it’s about opting out of a financial system the author believes is rigged, fragile, and dishonest.
Final Takeaway
You are reading a rebellion against centralized financial authority, not an investment pitch.
It contrasts:
Buffett’s trust in systems
Versus the author’s trust in scarcity, decentralization, and personal control
Whether one agrees or not, the argument is fundamentally about who controls money—and who pays the price when systems fail.
If you want, I can:
Compare this worldview to Buffett’s side fairly
Analyze whether Bitcoin truly protects against inflation
Break down risks in this philosophy
Or explain where both sides may actually agree
Who wrote above text ??
The text was written by Robert Kiyosaki.
He is the author of Rich Dad Poor Dad and the creator of the Cashflow board game. The ideas in the passage—such as “savers are losers,” distrust of the Federal Reserve, preference for gold, silver, and Bitcoin, and rejection of ETFs and Wall Street products—are all consistent with his long-standing public views and statements.
~*Robert Kiyosaki*
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Strong Star Channel
Try Somewhere else @manutd big win
3 weeks ago | [YT] | 1
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Strong Star Channel
Other President captured by USA
Saddam Hussein (Iraq): Captured by U.S. forces in December 2003 during the Iraq War after being found in a "spider hole" near Tikrit. He was later tried and executed by the Iraqi government in 2006.
Manuel Noriega (Panama): Captured in January 1990 after the U.S. invasion of Panama. He was brought to the U.S., convicted of drug trafficking, and spent decades in prison.
1 month ago | [YT] | 2
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Strong Star Channel
Akagakuru mwakamenye c?? Ko kuri iyimihanda ?
Umu chef w'isi (American) ngo yateye urugo rwa Madulo (Venezuela).
Ibyiyimihanda sinjya mbimenyera
🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
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Strong Star Channel
DEVELOPING AND GROWING IN YOUR DISCIPLINE
INTRODUCTION
Discipline remains one of the most decisive yet least fully understood drivers of sustainable success in personal life, leadership, and organizational performance. Across industries and cultures, discipline determines whether vision translates into execution or remains a mere aspiration.
In a diversified enterprise such as GL HOMES LTD ABA, where real estate development, construction, technology solutions, media operations, and leadership education intersect, discipline is not a soft virtue. It is a strategic necessity.
Organizations that grow without discipline expand their problems faster than their capacity to manage them. Individuals who rise without discipline often collapse under the weight of their own success.
This paper argues that discipline is not static. It must be intentionally developed, deliberately strengthened, and continuously refined.
Developing and growing in discipline is a journey rather than an event. It requires psychological alignment, behavioral consistency, ethical clarity, emotional regulation, and structured accountability.
This paper explores discipline as a living system that evolves with responsibility, scale, and influence, rather than as a rigid set of rules.
UNDERSTANDING DISCIPLINE BEYOND POPULAR MISCONCEPTIONS
Many people associate discipline with punishment, harsh control, or denial of pleasure. This misunderstanding has caused many to resist discipline rather than embrace it.
Academic literature presents discipline differently. Discipline is best understood as self-regulation aligned with long-term goals (Baumeister & Vohs, 2007).
Rather than restricting freedom, discipline expands it by reducing chaos, indecision, and wasted energy.
True discipline is not about forcing behavior but about training desire. What a person consistently wants eventually shapes what they consistently do.
In professional environments, discipline shows up as reliability, predictability.
1 month ago | [YT] | 1
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Strong Star Channel
Is it going to continue?
https://www.facebook.com/share/p/1C1tGuQKfa/
2 months ago | [YT] | 1
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Strong Star Channel
A Chinese billionaire speaks broken English - nobody laughs. An Indian scientist speaks broken English, nobody mocks him. A Russian athlete speaks broken English - applause. But let an African mispronounce one word… suddenly he's "illiterate." Who bewitched Africa?” ~ Professor Lumumba
2 months ago | [YT] | 1
View 0 replies
Strong Star Channel
Sadio mané in @manutd
I was called by Louis Van. He is the first one to call me later Krop and coach of Tottenham.
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Strong Star Channel
Manchester United win since 2016 at anfilid
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Strong Star Channel
Mu banyeshuri barangije amashuri abanza 27% bonyine ni bo batsinze imibare!
Naho 27.5% gusa batsinze Phyisics mu barangije umwaka wa 3 w'amashuri yisumbuye.
6 months ago | [YT] | 1
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