Robert Kiyosaki, the bestselling author of Rich Dad Poor Dad, has sounded another alarm — and this time, it’s not just about money. He says the United States is abandoning capitalism and freedom, sliding into what he calls a “Marxist, communist state.” His prescription? “Protect yourself with Bitcoin, gold, and silver — real money for real people.”
In a series of fiery posts on X, Kiyosaki warned that the U.S. is “losing its freedom, democracy, and capitalism” — and blames the country’s education system for fueling the ideological shift.
“We are becoming a Marxist, communist country — and this happens when Marxists run our schools,” wrote Kiyosaki.
He argues that universities no longer teach “real financial literacy,” producing citizens dependent on state systems and trapped in debt — not empowered entrepreneurs.
“Protect yourself with real financial education and real money — gold, silver, Bitcoin, and Ethereum. These are the people’s money.”
Kiyosaki’s latest warnings came after Zoran Mamdani — a self-described democratic socialist — was elected mayor of New York City. To Kiyosaki, this event marks a political turning point for America.
“Oh my God — Marxist Mamdani is now mayor of New York?” he wrote. “Don’t New Yorkers realize he’ll increase rent stabilization? That’s Marxism — endless rent control.”
He drew parallels between Karl Marx and WEF founder Klaus Schwab, quoting Marx’s call to “abolish private property” and Schwab’s infamous “You’ll own nothing, and you’ll be happy.”
In Kiyosaki’s eyes, these aren’t harmless policy ideas — they’re signs of a deeper erosion of property rights and economic autonomy, the core of what he calls “true capitalism.”
True to his long-time mantra, Kiyosaki again turned to Bitcoin as the ultimate hedge — not just against inflation, but against ideological control.
“Bitcoin and Ethereum are the people’s money. Gold and silver are God’s money.”
He believes fiat currencies are politically weaponized, banks are structurally fragile, and debt is America’s new religion. To him, digital and tangible hard assets are the modern version of a bunker — portable, borderless, untouchable by politics.
This worldview has made Kiyosaki both a cultural lightning rod and a financial prophet for a generation skeptical of institutions.
Kiyosaki’s argument fuses two of his life-long obsessions:
He sees the U.S. drifting toward dependency — not just economically but psychologically — and views Bitcoin as the last frontier of freedom.
The warning comes amid rising layoffs, automation anxiety, and ballooning U.S. debt. In one of his more human moments, Kiyosaki urged compassion toward the newly unemployed, quoting Pericles:
“What we leave behind is not what is engraved in stone monuments, but what is woven into the lives of others.”
Even in cynicism, he reminds his followers: financial freedom means responsibility — for yourself and your community.
To Kiyosaki, the fight for financial independence is no longer about wealth — it’s about liberty. As governments expand spending and control, Bitcoin, gold, and silver become modern acts of resistance.
“The Fed is dead,” he told followers in a recent stream. “You either trust politicians — or you trust math.”
And that, in Kiyosaki’s universe, is the real battle line: Math versus manipulation. Code versus control. Freedom versus fiat.
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