The “Rich Dad” author says hype is cheap, trust is rare, and Bitcoin’s scarcity is the new definition of real money.
Robert Kiyosaki — best-selling author of Rich Dad Poor Dad — is tired of the noise. In a recent post, he called out financial influencers and media outlets for spreading “clickbait garbage” instead of real education.
“Headlines like ‘Bitcoin crashing’ or ‘Bitcoin to $2 million this month’ are designed to farm clicks — not to help investors,” he said.
Kiyosaki’s frustration speaks to a deeper truth in modern markets: information has become entertainment, and retail traders are often caught in the middle.
Kiyosaki argues that true wealth is built on knowledge, not noise.
He urges content creators and analysts to respect their audience’s intelligence, offering context and principles — not panic and price targets.
“Trust and respect for knowledge will attract followers naturally,” he said. “You don’t need to scream to be heard.”
In other words: educate, don’t sensationalize.
Behind the media critique lies a serious economic concern. Kiyosaki points to the U.S. national debt — now over $37 trillion — as the real alarm bell for investors.
His message is simple: When a currency is being printed endlessly, scarce assets become survival tools.
That’s why his portfolio remains heavy in gold, silver, Bitcoin, and Ethereum — assets with limited supply and intrinsic trust.
Kiyosaki calls Bitcoin “the first truly scarce money.”
With only 21 million BTC ever to exist — and 20 million already mined — he believes the next phase of adoption will be driven by panic buying, not speculation.
“Bitcoin is first truly scarce money… only 21 million ever to be mined. World close 20 million now. Buying will accelerate. FOMO real. Please do not be late.”
His words echo the same logic that’s driven gold and silver demand for centuries — scarcity equals value, and trust equals longevity.
Beyond markets, Kiyosaki’s message is philosophical. He reminds followers to think critically, trust their judgment, and choose assets and mentors wisely.
No one — not Wall Street, not influencers, not even the Fed — deserves blind faith.
“Respect your own intelligence,” he says. “Freedom means thinking for yourself.”
Kiyosaki’s stance reflects a growing divide between hype-driven finance and principle-based investing. He’s not just stacking Bitcoin for profit — he’s framing it as an exit from the fiat illusion.
By grouping Bitcoin and Ethereum alongside gold and silver, Kiyosaki bridges the generational gap between traditional safe havens and digital scarcity.
In a world addicted to headlines, his message cuts through like a signal: Ignore the noise. Buy what lasts.
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