Don't naively think that putting money in the bank is safe—it's not saving; it's a slow suicide of wealth. Robert Kiyosaki, the author of 'Rich Dad Poor Dad,' bluntly states: 'Savers are losers.' This statement is harsh, but it's reality: since 1971, when the dollar decoupled from gold, global fiat currency has become an 'electronic illusion' that can be infinitely replicated. The Federal Reserve's printing press is roaring endlessly; your salary hasn't increased, but the prices of food, rent, and tuition keep soaring—this is not inflation? It's clearly an invisible tax on the middle class and the poor.
Bitcoin, in Kiyosaki's eyes, is the few weapons that ordinary people have to fight against this 'currency plunder.' Its total supply is fixed at 21 million coins, making it immune to manipulation by politicians and dilution by central banks. This is not speculation; it's a return to 'real value.' He would rather buy more during a crash than hold onto 'fake money' that is bound to depreciate for self-comfort.
Of course, some ridicule him for his predictions that often fall short. But the key has never been whether it rises or falls tomorrow, but whether systemic risks truly exist. When U.S. national debt exceeds $40 trillion, when multiple countries accelerate de-dollarization, and when ordinary people lack even the ability to withstand unemployment once—can you still pretend that everything is peaceful?
Kiyosaki's radicalism precisely reflects the dereliction of duty in mainstream financial education. We are trained to be cogs in the 'work-save-repay' machine, yet no one teaches us how to protect our purchasing power. Perhaps true awakening starts with questioning 'whether money itself is reliable.'


